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Yermak Timofeyevich

Yermak Timofeyevich (Russian: Ермак Тимофеевич, IPA: [jɪrˈmak tʲɪmɐˈfʲejɪvʲɪt͡ɕ]; born between 1532 – August 5 or 6, 1585) was a Cossack ataman and is today a hero in Russian folklore and myths. During the reign of the Russian tsar Ivan the Terrible, Yermak started the Russian conquest of Siberia.

Yermak Timofeyevich
17th century portrait of Yermak, the first Russian leader of the exploration and conquest of Siberia
Bornbetween 1532
DiedAugust 5 or 6, 1585 (aged 43–53)
Sibiryak, Qashliq, Khanate of Sibir, Russia
Occupations
Known forThe Cossack who led the Russian exploration and conquest of Siberia, in the reign of Tsar Ivan the Terrible

Russians' fur-trade interests fueled their desire to expand east into Siberia. The Tatar Khanate of Kazan was established by Ulugh Muhammad as the best entryway into Siberia. In 1552, Ivan the Terrible's modernized army toppled the khanate.[1] After the takeover of Kazan, the tsar looked to the powerful and affluent Stroganov merchant family to spearhead the eastward expansion. In the late 1570s, the Stroganovs recruited Cossack fighters to invade Asia on behalf of the tsar.[2] These Cossacks elected Yermak as the leader of their armed forces, and in 1582 Yermak set out with an army of 840 to attack the Khanate of Sibir.[3]

On October 26, 1582, Yermak and his soldiers overthrew Kuchum Khan's Tatar empire at Qashliq in a battle that marked the "conquest of Siberia".[4] Yermak remained in Siberia and continued his struggle against the Tatars until 1584, when a raid organized by Kuchum Khan ambushed and killed him and his party.[5]

The specifics of Yermak's life, such as his appearance, background, and dates of events, remain points of controversy for historians because the texts that document his life are not reliable.[6] However, his life and conquests had a profound influence on Siberian relations, sparking Russian interest in the region and establishing the Tsardom of Russia as an imperial power east of the Urals.[7]

Authenticity edit

There is less information about Yermak than most other notable explorers and historical figures. Much of what we know about Yermak is derived from folklore and legend. There are no contemporary descriptions of Yermak and all portraits are merely estimations.[3] One of the Siberian chronicles, the Remezov Chronicle, written more than one hundred years after Yermak's death describes him as “flat-faced, black of beard with curly hair, of medium stature and thick-set and broad-shouldered,”[8][9] but even this detailed account is not reliable because the narrator had never seen Yermak.[3]

In addition to his physical features' being unknown, the details of Yermak's life and the circumstances leading up to his excursion into Siberia are obscure.[10] Russian writer Valentin Rasputin laments the lack of information that we have about Yermak considering the vast scope of his contributions to Russian society.[11]

Knowledge of Yermak's upbringing and voyages pales in comparison to that of other explorers.[12] Historians encounter serious difficulties when attempting to piece together the specifics of Yermak's life and exploits because the two key, primary sources about Yermak may be biased or inaccurate. These sources are the Stroganov Chronicle and the Sinodnik. The Stroganov Chronicle was commissioned by the Stroganov family itself, therefore it exaggerates the family's involvement in the conquest of Siberia. The Sinodik is an account of Yermak's campaign written forty years after his death by the archbishop of Tobolsk, Cyprian (Kipriyan). The text was formed based on oral tradition and memories of his expedition but almost certainly was affected by the archbishop's desire to canonize Yermak.[13][14] The combination of forgotten details over time and the embellishment or omission of facts in order for Yermak to be accepted as a saint suggests that the Sinodik could be erroneous.[13] Though Cyprian failed to canonize Yermak, he made an effort to immortalize the warrior, who he considered being the "Grand Inquisitor" of Siberia.[14]

These documents, along with the various others that chronicle Yermak's expeditions, are filled with contradictions that make the truth about Yermak's life difficult to discern.[10] While the sources that exist on Yermak are fallible, those accounts, along with folklore and legend, are all that historians have to base their knowledge on; therefore, they are widely accepted and considered to reflect the truth.[13]

Early life edit

Ancestry edit

The Don Cossack warrior Yermak Timofeyevich was born by the Chusovaya River on the eastern fringes of the Muscovite lands. The only information about Yermak's upbringing comes from a source called the Cherepanov Chronicle. This chronicle, compiled by a Tobolsk coachman in 1760 – long after Yermak's death – was never published in full, but, in 1894, historian Aleksandr Alekseyevich "A.A." Dmitrieyev concluded it probably represents a copy or paraphrase of an authentic 17th-century document. According to the section of the chronicle entitled "On Yermak, and where he was born", it is stated that Yermak's grandfather, Afonasiy Grigor'yevich Alenin, came from Suzdal, north-east of Moscow.[15]

To escape poverty, he moved south to Vladimir where he became a coachman in the Murom forests. In the Murom forests, the voyevoda arrested him for driving unscrupulous passengers – robbers who had hired him. Afonasiy's son (Yermak's father) Timofey relocated to the Stroganov lands on the Chusovaya in order to make money.[15][16]

Occupation edit

Yermak worked in the Stroganovs' river fleet as a porter and a sailor transporting salt along the Kama and the Volga rivers. Growing tired of his work, he assembled a gang, left his employment, and moved to the Don[citation needed] region to become a river pirate. Among his fellow Cossack bandits, he acquired the nickname Yermak.[16][17]

Prior to his conquest of Siberia, Yermak's combat experience consisted of leading a Cossack detachment for the tsar in the Livonian War of 1558–83 and plundering merchant ships.[3][11][18] Based on legends and folk songs, for years, Yermak had been involved in robbing and plundering on the Volga with the hetman Ivan Kolzo and four other Cossack leaders.[14] Historian Valerie Kivelson refers to Yermak's group as “his gang of thugs.”[19] Like many other Cossacks, Yermak's gang was involved in the “thieves” trade (“vorovskim” remeslom).[13] It was typical of Cossacks to engage in piracy on the Sea of Azov or the Caspian Sea and to rob various envoys and Russian or Persian merchants.[20] Though a bandit, Yermak earned a reputation as an eminent and loyal Russian fighter. Through his experience fighting in the Livonian War, he learned war tactics and excelled beyond the other hetmans in skill.[18]

Conquest background edit

 
Messengers from Yermak at the Red Porch in front of Ivan the Terrible; by Stanisław Jakub Rostworowski

In the late 1500s, prior to Yermak's expeditions, the Russians attempted to push eastward into Siberia in search of furs. Under Ivan the Great, the Russians entered northwest Siberia but “to approach Siberia from that direction proved too arduous and difficult, even in the best of times.”[21] The Russians decided that taking a southern route through the Tatar khanate of Kazan would allow them to penetrate Siberia more easily, but Kazan would need to be overthrown first. Ivan the Terrible's first foreign objective upon rising to power was to take Kazan. Ivan the Terrible's modernized army proved successful at the beginning of October 1552 and Ivan proceeded to open up the east to enterprising Russian individuals, such as the Stroganovs. Anika Stroganov used the former khanate of Kazan as an entryway into Siberia and established a private empire on the southwest corner of Siberia.[1]

Following the Russian conquest under Ivan the Terrible, the Tatar khanate of Kazan became the Russian province of Perm. Ivan the Terrible had tremendous trust in the entrepreneurial prowess of the Stroganov family and granted them the province of Perm as a financial investment which would be sure to benefit Russia in the future.[22] The tsar also gave the Stroganovs permission to expand into the territory along the Tobol and Irtysh Rivers which belonged to the Muslim leader Kuchum Khan.[23] The Stroganovs proceeded to launch expeditions eastward into non-Russian territories.[24][25] They pushed into the khanate of Sibir, the sister state of the former khanate of Kazan, because it maintained control over Siberia's fur in the west.[25]

 
A portrait fantasy from the late 18th century

During the time of the Russian conquest of Kazan in the 1540s and 1550s, Sibir had been undergoing conflicts of its own with rival clans. The khanate was on the precarious ground until the rise of Kuchum Khan, a descendant of the famed Chingis Khan, in the 1560s.[24][26] Kuchum Khan built up allies among his neighbors and the Crimean Tatars in order to thwart the Stroganovs’ expansion across the Urals. In July 1572, Kuchum launched his first raid on Stroganov settlements, which resulted in almost one hundred deaths. In 1573, the Tatar army expanded and changed leadership. Kuchum's nephew, Mahmet-kul, assumed control of the Tatar army. The Stroganovs realized that they could no longer expect their settlers to remain in the lands around Perm if they only fought a defensive battle. The tsar granted the Stroganov family permission to invade Asia.[27] However, the tsar soon changed his mind and told the Stroganovs to retract from Siberia, fearing that Russia did not have the resources or manpower to topple Kuchum Khan's empire.[2]

The Stroganovs decided to ignore the tsar's orders and, in the late 1570s, Anika Stroganov's grandsons Nikita and Maksim recruited Cossack fighters to wage war on their behalf. They elected the Cossack chieftain Yermak Timofeyevich as the leader of the Cossack brigades.[2] According to the Stroganov Chronicle, on April 6, 1579, after hearing of Yermak's and his comrades’ “daring and bravery,” the Stroganovs sent a letter to the men asking them to come to their ancestral estates in Chusovaya and summoning them to fight against the Tatars in the name of the tsar.[28] Since Yermak had been the most illustrious of the recruits, he became the captain (ataman) of the “conquest of Siberia.”[2][14] However, there remains the question as to whether Yermak, in fact, decided to fight the war of his own accord without being pursued by the Stroganovs. This question arose due to the discrepancy between the narratives of the Stroganov Chronicle and a different Siberian chronicle, the Yespiov Chronicle. The Stroganov Chronicle portrays the family as the motivating force behind Yermak's campaign while the Yesipov Chronicle fails even to mention the family.[29] Perhaps the Stroganovs told the story in a way that would inspire the Russian people to feel just as indebted to them as to Yermak for the conquest of Siberia. Siberian historians are divided on the matter, some believing that the Stroganovs were behind Yermak's campaign and others believing that they played no part in it.[30]

Conquest of Siberia edit

 
Yermak used river portages to get from the Chusovaya River to the Tagil River

Yermak was officially enlisted by the Stroganovs in the spring of 1582.[3] His quest was “to take de facto possession of the country along the Tobol and the Irtysh, which was already de jure in the Stroganovs’ possession under the Tsar's charter of 1574.”[31] The Stroganovs’ ultimate goal was to open up a southern passageway to Mangaseya to access its furs.[31] The Khanate of Sibir blocked the road from the Urals to Mangaseya.[32] After overthrowing the khanate, the intended final destination of Yermak's five thousand mile journey was the Bering Strait. Yermak led a small army of 840 men, made up of 540 of his own followers and three hundred supplied by the Stroganovs.[3][14][31] His army was composed of “Russians, Tatars, Lithuanians, and Germans.” The Lithuanians and Germans of the crew came from the Lithuanian front.[31] Nikita and Maksim Stroganov spent twenty thousand rubles of their riches to outfit the army with the best weapons available. This was especially to the advantage of the Russian detachment because their Tatar opponents did not have industrial weapons. According to Russian history specialist W. Bruce Lincoln, the Tatars’ “bows, arrows, and spears” went up against Yermak's team's “matchlock muskets, sabers, pikes, and several small cannons.”[33] However, according to the Russian author Yuri Semyonov, “Yermak had no cannon, and only a small number of his men carried firearms. The Cossacks had not a single horse, while Kuchum and his men were mounted. His cavalry could move quickly in any direction, while the Cossacks were tied to their rafts, which were laden with all their supplies.”[32]

Yermak first embarked on his journey through Siberia from a frontier fort in Perm on the Chusovaya River on September 1, 1582,[33] though other sources claim that he may have started his campaign in 1579 or 1581.[23][34] When navigating down rivers, the crew used high-sided boats that originated in Russia. Throughout their journey, they encountered violent opposition from Kuchum Khan's native allies but the high sides of their boats acted as shields.[33] When crossing the Urals, the Cossacks had to carry their possessions on their backs because they did not have horses.[35] After two months, Yermak's army had finally crossed the Urals. They followed the river Tura and found themselves at the outskirts of Kuchum Khan's empire. Soon they reached the kingdom's capital city of Qashliq. On October 23, 1582, Yermak's army fought the Battle of Chuvash Cape, which initiated three days of fighting against Kuchum's nephew, Mehmet-kul, and the Tatar army. Yermak's infantry blocked the Tatar charge with mass musket fire, which wounded Mahmet-kul and prevented the Tatars from scoring a single Russian casualty. Yermak succeeded in capturing Qashliq and the battle came to mark the “conquest of Siberia.”[4] The Stroganov Chronicle provides an account of Kuchum Khan's reaction to the attack on Qashliq and Yermak's success:

Khan Kuchyum, seeing his ruin and the loss of his kingdom and riches, said to all his men with bitter lamentation: ‘O murzas and princes, let us flee without delaying…The Stroganovs sent men of the common people against me from their forts to avenge on me the evil I had inflicted; they sent the atamans and Cossacks, Yermak and his comrades, with not many of their men. He came upon us, defeated us and did us such great harm.’[36]

While Yermak had succeeded in taking Qashliq, the battle had reduced his Cossack force to 500 men.[37][38] Yermak also now faced a supply problem. While the army had found treasures such as fur, silk, and gold in the Tatar city, no food or provisions had been left behind.[39] The inhabitants had also fled the city, preventing their enlistment for aid. However, four days after Yermak claimed Qashliq the people returned, and Yermak soon befriended the Ostyak people.[38] The Ostyaks would formally declare their allegiance to Yermak on October 30, complementing their pledge by delivering offerings of food to the city.[39]

 
Vasily Surikov's 1895 painting "Yermak's Conquest of Siberia".

Yermak used the Ostyak tributes to feed his band of Cossacks throughout the winter.[38] However, these supplies proved to be insufficient, and the Cossacks soon ventured into the wilderness to fish and hunt.[39] The Cossacks’ task was not without trouble, as although Yermak had defeated the Tatars they continued to harass the Cossacks, preventing Yermak from establishing complete control over the region.[40] The Tatars struck a decisive blow on December 20, when a Cossack party of twenty men were discovered and slain. Upon their failure to return, Yermak left the city to investigate, eventually finding that Mahmet-kul had recovered from their earlier battle and was responsible for the Cossacks’ murder. Yermak then entered into battle with Mahmet-kul and his forces, defeating him once again.[39]

The defeat of Mahmet-kul provided a brief respite to the Cossacks. However, in April 1583, he returned to the region.[41] In an unfortunate twist of fate, Mahmet-kul was quickly ambushed and captured by a small party of Cossacks, whose numbers ranged from as little as 10[41] to as many as 50.[42] A few days after his capture, Mahmet-kul sent a messenger to Kuchum stating that he was alive and in good health. He also requested that the Khan cease attacks on the Cossacks and those bringing tribute to Yermak.[43] Yermak, taking advantage of this lull in hostilities, set out down the Irtysh and Ob to complete his subjugation of the local tribal princes. He soon encountered the Ostyak prince Demian, who had fortified himself in a fortress on the banks of the Irtysh with 2,000 loyal fighters. It is reported to have taken Yermak and his men considerable time to break through their defenses due to Demian's possession of a gilded idol. Yermak's forces eventually prevailed; however, upon entering the fort, no idol was found. After dispersing a group of priests and warriors by brandishing their firearms, Yermak determined to subdue the most influential Ostyak prince of the region, Samar, who had joined forces with eight other princes. Yermak, noting that Samar had failed to place guards around his encampment, launched a surprise attack, killing Samar and disbanding his forces. Yermak was then able to secure tribute from the eight other princes. After this conquest, he continued down the river, succeeding in capturing the key Ostyak town of Nazym. Yermak's friend, Ataman Nikita Pan, and several Cossacks lost their lives in the battle. Yermak then directed his forces down the river Ob, conquering several small forts. After reaching a point at which the river broadened to a point of three or four versts, Yermak halted the expedition and returned his forces to Qashliq.[44]

Upon returning to Qashliq, Yermak decided to inform the Stroganovs and the tsar of his conquests. While his reasons for this are unclear, experts believe that, in addition to wishing to clear his name of earlier misdeeds,[45] Yermak also desperately needed supplies.[40] To his end, he sent his trusted lieutenant Ivan Kolzo with fifty men, two letters (one each for the Stroganovs and Ivan the Terrible), and a large assortment of furs for the tsar.[40][41][46] The exact amount sent to the tsar is disputed, as descriptions range from 2,500[47] to 5,000[40] to sixty sacks[48] of furs. Kozo's arrival at the Stroganovs was well-timed, as Maksim Stroganov had just received a letter from Ivan denouncing Yermak and threatening him and his followers with death.[49] Kolzo, bearing news of Kuchum's defeat, Mahmet-kul's capture, and the subjugation of Tatar lands, was thus well received by a relieved Maksim.[50] Maksim provided Kolzo with lodging, food, and money before sending him on his way.[49]

Kolzo, upon reaching Moscow, was granted an audience with Ivan despite having a Muscovite bounty on his head.[47] To the detriment of Moscow's interests, the Livonian War had just been ended and Ivan had begun receiving reports of local tribesman conducting raids in Perm,[47] putting him in a foul mood. Upon reading the news born by Kolzo concerning the extension of his dominion, Ivan became overjoyed, immediately pardoning the Cossacks and proclaiming Yermak to be a hero of the first degree.[41] The triumphant atmosphere extended across the city, as church bells were tolled throughout Moscow to glorify Yermak.[51] Ivan then had many gifts prepared for Yermak, including his personal fur mantle, a goblet, two suits of armor emblazoned with bronze double-headed eagles, and money.[52] Ivan also commanded that a band of streltsy be sent to reinforce Yermak.[53] Reports differ on whether 300[53][54][55] or 500[56][57] men were sent. The Stroganovs were also ordered to support this group with an additional fifty men upon their arrival in Perm.[53] Yermak was bestowed the title “Prince of Siberia” by Ivan,[58] who also commanded that Mahmet-kul be sent to Moscow.[59]

Upon returning to Qashliq, Kolzo informed Yermak of the tsar's command that Mahmet-kul be delivered to him. Yermak, aware that doing so would eliminate Kuchum's only motive for peace, nonetheless obeyed the tsar and arranged for his transport. Unsurprisingly, Kuchum's forces began to increase the frequency of their raids.[59] Yermak now found himself in a predicament, as a long winter had prevented the gathering of supplies and tributes and the tsar's reinforcements had not yet arrived.[60] Under orders from the tsar, the Stroganovs had contributed fifty cavalries to the reinforcement party. However, the horses had slowed the party to a crawl across the Siberia landscape, and they did not even cross the Urals until the spring of 1584.[61]

In September 1583, a call for help from a Tatar leader named Karacha was delivered to Yermak begging for assistance against the Nogai Tatars.[55] Yermak, wary of Karacha but nonetheless disposed to help, deployed Kolzo with a force of 40 Cossacks. Karacha, however, was not to be trusted, as Kolzo and his men walked into an ambush and were all killed. Now without Kolzo, Yermak was left with a little more than 300 men.[59] Sensing Yermak's waning power, the tribes previously under his control revolted,[54] and Qashliq soon came under siege by a collective army of Tatars, Voguls, and Ostyaks.[59] Cleverly, they encircled the city with a line of wagons, both preventing passage to and from the city while protecting the attackers from the Russians’ firearms.[54] Yermak, despite having limited supplies, was able to endure the blockade for three months.[59] However, the Cossacks could not last forever, and on the cloudy night of June 12, 1584, Yermak decided to act. Stealthily penetrating the line of wagons, Yermak's men were able to surprise the gathered forces in their sleep, killing a large number.[54] As Karacha's forces had been caught completely unaware, Yermak was able to recover a substantial amount of provisions from the barricade.[55] Karacha, having failed in his mission, was punished by Kuchum, who sentenced Karacha's two sons to death.[62] Karacha, fueled by the loss of his sons, regrouped the native tribes and returned to assault Yermak the next day.[62][63] Karacha's forces, however, were soundly defeated, as the Cossacks were able to kill one hundred men with only two dozen deaths of their own.[62]

Defeated and disgraced, Karacha fled south to the steppes of the Ishim, where Kuchum waited.[54] Freed from confinement, Yermak turned to the offensive, conquering many towns and forts to the east of Qashliq and extending the tsar's dominion.[64] Having already regained the loyalty of the revolting tribes, Yermak continued sailing up the Irtysh throughout the summer of 1584 to subdue tribes and demand tribute.[55][61] Although he attempted to search for Karacha, Yermak was ultimately unsuccessful in this venture.[55] Also, while Yermak had succeeded in regaining the loyalty of the tribes, his men were now almost completely out of gunpowder.[61] To make matters worse, while his reinforcements arrived, they did so utterly exhausted and depleted by scurvy. Indeed, many of the men, including their commanding officer, had not survived the journey.[54] Thus, in addition to facing the problem of escalating hostilities, their food shortage was magnified by the arrival of more men.[53] Eventually, it is reported the situation grew dire enough that Yermak's men turned to cannibalism, eating the bodies of the deceased.[65]

Yermak’s death edit

The precise details of Yermak's death are lost to history, but legend has preserved multiple variations of the account.[40] With the onset and worsening of the food shortage, Yermak's people had now entered a time of famine. Kuchum, knowing this, set a trap.[66] The most common account is that Kuchum purposely leaked information to Yermak, in which it was claimed that Bukharan merchants from Central Asia, traveling with large amounts of food, were being prevented from moving by Kuchum's men.[40] In August 1584, Yermak set out with a band of men to free the traders. Finding the reports to be false, Yermak ordered a return to Qashliq.[55] Whether because of an ongoing storm[55] or because the men were tired from rowing upstream,[67] Yermak's force stopped on a small island formed by two branches of the Irtysh and set up camp on the night of August 4–5, 1584.[40][67] Convinced that the river offered protection, Yermak's men fell asleep with no guard. Kuchum, however, had been following Yermak's party and was lying in wait. Kuchum's forces forded the river around midnight; their approach was hidden by the loudness of the storm and the dark of night.[5] Kuchum's Tatars were upon Yermak's men so quickly that they could not use either their guns or weapons, and a slaughter ensued.[40] In the ensuing chaos, it is reported that all but three men on the Russian side were killed, including Yermak.[5] Legend has it that after fighting through the invaders[65] and being wounded in the arm by a knife,[68] Yermak, finding that their boats had been washed away in the storm, attempted to cross the river. Due to the weight of the armor gifted to him by the Tsar, Yermak sank to the bottom and drowned.[5] At least one survivor, unburdened by such heavy armor, was able to flee across the river and return to Qashliq with news of Yermak's death.[citation needed]

Yermak's body was borne down the river, where seven days later it is said to have been found by a Tatar fisherman named Yanish.[55] Easily recognizable by the eagle on his armor, Yermak's corpse was stripped and hung on a frame made out of six poles, where for six weeks archers used his body for target practice.[69] However, it is said that animals did not feed on him and his body produced no odor and that the corpse caused fear and nightmares in the people. Heeding these omens, the Tatars buried him as a hero, killing thirty oxen in his name.[69][70] His prized armor was eventually distributed among the Tatar chiefs.[5]

Legacy edit

Upon receiving news of Yermak's death, the Cossacks became immediately demoralized.[71] The original band of men had dwindled to 150 fighters,[72] and command now fell to Glukhoff, the leader of the initial group of reinforcements that the tsar had delivered to Yermak.[73] The Cossacks soon decided to abandon Qashliq and to retreat to Russia. Before traveling a great distance, they ran into a group of one hundred reinforcements that had been sent as additional strength from the tsar. With this upturn in fortune, Yermak's band resolved to return to Qashliq and refortify their position in accordance with the tsar's will. The fast-acting and perceptive Tatars, however, had been informed of the group's flight and had retaken the city almost immediately, preventing any peaceful reoccupation of their former stronghold. Although the Tatar position appeared strong, they were no longer led by Kuchum, who had lost his power, and were thus not as stable as before. Furthermore, another three hundred reinforcements from the tsar soon arrived to join the Russians. Led by Tchulkoff, this new force provided a significant boost in fighting strength to the party. Despite the tumultuous state of the Tatar leadership and their newly received recruits, however, the Russians did not pursue another attempt on Qashliq. Instead, in a culmination of the events immediately following Yermak's fatal plunge, they founded a new settlement in 1587 on the site of what would become Tobolsk, a comfortable twelve miles from Qashliq. Although the Tatars quickly began raids against their familiar foe, after a short period they ceased, leaving the Russians to their new town.[71]

Yermak's heroic endeavors in the Russian East laid the groundwork for future Russian expansion and settlement. Soon after Yermak and his initial band set out for Siberia, merchants and peasants followed in their wake, hoping to harness some of the fur riches that abounded in the land.[74] This trend grew exponentially after Yermak's death, as his legend spread through the domain rapidly and, with it, the news of a land rich in furs and vulnerable to Russian influence.[75] Colonization attempts soon followed, as Tyumen, the first known town after Yermak's death, was founded in 1586.[72] The settling of this territory facilitated the establishment and development of Siberian agriculture. Most of these farmers were, in fact, soldiers, who grew their own sustenance out of necessity.[76]

Yermak had set a precedent of Cossack involvement in Siberian expansion, and the exploration and conquests of these men were responsible for many of the additions to the Russian empire in the east.[77] After the initial return of the Cossacks shortly after Yermak's death, an ambitious project of fortification began under the direction of Tsar Boris Godunov. Its achievements, including the extension of protection for Russians in the region, would drive even greater numbers of entrepreneurs to Siberia.[78] In 1590, Tobolsk received a significant boost in prominence as it was dubbed the principal city and administrative center of the region.[79] The fur trade also continued to grow, aided by the Cossacks, who in 1593 established the trading center of Berezof on the Ob River at the sixty-fourth latitude.[80] The practice of collecting tributes of fur from the natives continued to spread, and in the 17th century such furs made up 25–33 percent of the income to the tsar's treasury.[74] Thus, as soon as fifteen years after Yermak's death, the basin of the Ob River had truly become a region of Russian influence.[81] Even so, the Russians did not rest on their laurels, and the attitude and pace of expansion pioneered by Yermak continued well into the 17th century. Indeed, within the first half of the century the fort of Yeniseysk was established in 1619, the city of Yakutsk founded in 1632, and the important feat of reaching the Sea of Okhotsk on the Pacific coast in 1639.[72] Throughout these campaigns, Yermak's influence was undeniable, as the pace he had established for achievement in his relatively short time in Siberia heralded a new age of Russian pioneering.[citation needed]

Yermak's life and conquests had a significant impact on Russian policy towards Siberia and the colonization attempts that followed this shift. Prior to Yermak's agreement with the Strogonovs, the Russian attitude towards the Siberian expanse had been one preoccupied primarily with defense, not aggression. The top priority was the repelling of the Tatar hordes, and, as shown by Ivan's letter to the Strogonovs, the central government rarely involved itself unless the tribes succeeded in entering Russian territory. This, of course, changed with Yermak, whose triumphs showed that the Tatars could be put on the defensive and that Russia could now establish itself as an aggressive power in the East.[7] Yermak also changed the involvement of the tsar in Siberian affairs. In reaching out to the tsar for assistance, Yermak gained the support of the government; indeed, it was reinforcements from the tsar that solidified the Russian presence in the region immediately after Yermak's death.[82] This newfound commitment and involvement in the area is best summarized by Ivan's acceptance of the title bestowed upon him by Yermak: “Tsar of Sibir.” Yermak's pioneering further enabled this system to exist because it depended on the success he achieved in gaining tribute from conquered peoples. Much like Yermak, future troops were sent with the understanding that it would be necessary to supplement their base payment with treasures and tributes gained from conquest.[83] Without this system in place, it is unlikely such an arrangement would have come to fruition.[citation needed]

Future explorers would also take notice of Yermak's strategy in approaching the Siberian lands, which, unlike those in many other colonization attempts, already had an established imperial power. However, Yermak wisely recognized that Kuchum's territories were not unified. Yermak noted that many of these peoples were nothing more than vassals and that they were quite diverse in terms of race, language, and religion. Unlike Kuchum and his Mohammedan Tatars, many of these groups were pagan. Due to the sum of these differences, many simply paid tribute to avoid trouble, and it mattered little to whom the tribute was paid. Yermak's unique strength was thus in recognizing the bigger picture and playing it to his advantage, first identifying and then executing quick, efficient ways to establish influence in the region.[32]

The actions of Yermak also redefined the meaning of the word Cossack. While it is uncertain whether Yermak's group was related in any way to the Yaik or Ural Cossacks, it is known that their company was previously outlawed by the Russian government. However, in sending his letter and his trusted lieutenant Ivan Kolzo to Ivan the Terrible, Yermak transformed the image of the Cossack overnight from a bandit to a soldier recognized by the Tsar of Moscow. Now, Yermak's Cossacks had effectively been incorporated into the military system and were able to receive support from the tsar.[84] This new arrangement also acted as a sort of pressure-relief valve for the Cossacks, who had a history of being troublesome on the Russian frontier. In sending as many of them as possible further east into unconquered lands, the burgeoning and extremely profitable lands on the borders of Russian territory were given respite.[75] Yermak's call for aid thus spawned a new type of Cossack which, by virtue of its link to the government, would enjoy significant favor from future Russian rulers. Despite this new shift in orientation, it is worth noting that the Cossack name remained in place in Siberia and that soldiers sent as reinforcements often adopted this title.[85] Furthermore, this realignment was not without criticism, however, and some saw Yermak as a traitor to the Cossack name. Such detractors saw Yermak's death as punishment for turning away from the Cossack code and becoming a pawn of the tsar. Fittingly, then, it was his armor, the very symbol of the tsar, that dragged him down to his fate.[67]

Relics of Yermak also continued to command significant power and prestige years after his death. In particular, the search for his armor affected at least one element of Siberian relations. Decades after Yermak's death, a Mongol leader who had assisted the Russian government approached the voyevoda of Tobolsk and asked for his assistance in obtaining an item in the Tatar's possession, believed to be Yermak's armor. The reason he approached the voyevoda was that he had previously been denied a trade by the Tatars after offering them ten slave families and a thousand sheep. The Tatars, despite being convinced that the armor had divine properties, agreed to the sale upon the involvement of the voyevoda. Soon after, the Mongol, convinced of the power of Yermak's armor, refused to service the Russian government because he no longer feared their might.[67]

Commemoration edit

 
Yermak on the Millennium of Russia monument in Novgorod

Multiple statues and monuments have been erected in his honor throughout Russia. V. A. Beklemishev began his construction project for a monument dedicated to Yermak in 1903 in the Cathedral Square of Novocherkassk, the capital of the Don Cossack country. On the monument Yermak is shown holding his regimental banner in his left hand and the ceremonial cap of his rival Kuchum Khan in his right hand.[86] The back of the monument reads: “To the Don Cossack Ataman Ermak Timofeyevich, the Siberia conqueror from the grateful posterity. In honor of Don Cossack Army 300th Anniversary. He passed away in Irtysh waves on August 5, 1584.”[87] Some believe that Yermak was born in the village of Kachalinskaya on the Don. Though this region has long claimed Yermak to be one of its own, there is no evidence that he was born there or ever visited.[88]

 
Statue of Yermak in Novocherkassk

There is also a statue of Yermak at Tobolsk and one in the State Russian Museum in Saint Petersburg designed by Mark Antokolsky.[88]

Two icebreakers have been named after Yermak. The first, built in Newcastle, England, in 1898, was one of the first major vessels of that type ever built and the second, which entered the service in 1974, was the first of an impressive new type of ship.[89]

In commemoration of Yermak, there is a town named after him on the upper Irtysh.[89] Similarly, a mountain in the Perm Region made up of three cliff stacks is called the Yermak Stone after Yermak. Legend has it that Yermak and his brigade passed one of the harsh Siberian winters on the cliff side.[90]

In popular culture edit

Film edit

Yermak makes an appearance in the 1947 film Tale of the Siberian Land (Skazanie o zemle sibirskoi) directed by Ivan Pyryev. The movie tells the story of a pianist named Andrei who moves to Siberia to work at a paper-processing plant after being wounded in World War II and losing his faith in music. Once in Siberia, Andrei reunites with a female singer with whom he had been in love in Moscow. When nothing comes of their second encounter, he heads far north in Siberia and becomes so enamored with the might of Soviet construction projects that he composes a choral symphony entitled the ‘Tale of Siberian Land.’ Andrei is then reunited with his beloved who finds him in the depths of Siberia. The two travel to Moscow where Andrei's symphony is performed in the Conservatory. The symphony tells his life story while presenting the “mysterious, wild, silver grey” landscape of Siberia to the audience. In displaying the “extreme might of the land,” he conveys “the extreme heroism of the Russian and Soviet conquest of Siberia.” The symphony introduces Yermak as a mighty figure who “made his way through the fog and mist to do battle with Siberia.”[91]

 
Yermak on a Russian postage stamp (2009)

The film then begins a visual montage which traces Russian history and the representation of the Russian landscape over time. Yermak is shown as a “pantomime hero” leading his forces into battle. Simon Franklin and Emma Widdis describe that “here, the director taps into the folk imagination and the landscape that he evokes is plainly the landscape of the epic. As the battle ends, the natural world itself expresses the majesty of Yermak’s achievement. Fire turns into lightning, and then the rain begins: the conquest of the elements is complete, as nature bows down in the face of Russian strength, and Siberia is conquered.”[92] The montage then shifts to show the landscape as softer, flatter, and gentler. Andrei proceeds to describe the process through which Yermak's descendants continued to dominate Siberia.[93] Ultimately, Yermak is portrayed as the hero who launched the conquest that shaped the whole of Russia.[citation needed]

In 1996, directors Vladimir Krasnopolsky and Valeri Uskov produced the film Yermak, a historical drama about the conquest of Siberia which starred Viktor Stepanov, Irina Alfyorova, and Nikita Dzhigurda.[94]

Literature edit

  • Yermak, the Conqueror of Siberia (1899) – by Leo Tolstoy
  • Yermak, the Conqueror (1930) – a novel by Pyotr Nikolayevich Krassnoff
  • Gulyai-Volga (1930) – a novel by Artem Vesely[95]
  • The Cossacks (1969) – by Philip Longworth, a historical account of the Cossack experience in Russia which provides portraits of famous Cossack leaders Yermak, Bogdan Khmelnitski, and Stepan Razin[96]
  • The Cossacks (1963) OUP - by Barbara Bartos-Höppner. A fictionalised and dramatised account of the life of Yermak Timofeyev from the point of view of Mitya, a young boy who becomes a Cossack and who accompanies Yermak on his invasion of Siberia. (Trans. from the German by Stella Humphries.)
  • Yermak's Campaign in Siberia (1974) – translated from Russian by Tatiana Minorsky and David Wileman and edited, with an introduction and notes, by Terence Armstrong
  • In addition to his nonfiction portrayals in the books listed above, Yermak and his expeditions of conquest are mentioned in The Zombie Survival Guide by Max Brooks, as well as being featured in its accompanying tie-in comic Recorded Attacks, wherein an expeditionary party of Yermak seizes a Siberian settlement of an unknown Asiatic tribe, engaging in slaughter and cannabalism, before themselves succumbing to a revived, apparently zombified woman whom they had dug up, leaving only one survivor.

Folk songs and poetry edit

There are many folk songs and much poetry about Yermak which contribute to our vision of the hero. By tracing the transformation of folk songs and poetry about Yermak since his death, it is possible to see how his status as a legendary figure has evolved over time.[97]

Over 150 songs about Yermak's exploits have been collected and spread throughout all of Russia since the 18th century.[89] As many as 35 of these songs have been collected in a text by V. Th. Miller entitled “Historical Songs of the Russian People of the XVI-XVII Centuries.”[97] One song describes how “Yermak’s men kill the Muscovite ambassador to Persia named as Semen Konstantinovich Karamyshev” while others speak of Yermak's acts of piracy and pillaging with his Cossack brigade.[98] Though most folk songs are not entirely consistent with the historical accounts of Yermak's life, there are many similarities and much overlap among the different songs. There are often several versions of the same song that share certain details but differ on others.[99]

I. I. Dmitriyev (1760–1837) wrote the dramatic poem “Yermak” and K. P. Ryleyev (1795–1826) in 1821 wrote a poem entitled “The death of Yermak.”[98]

Paintings edit

  • “The Conquest of Siberia by Yermak” (1895) by Vasily Surikov, located in the State Russian Museum in St. Petersburg
  • various paintings by Semyon Remezov in the Remezov Chronicle

Videogames edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Lincoln, p. 30
  2. ^ a b c d Lincoln, p. 40
  3. ^ a b c d e f Lincoln, p. 41
  4. ^ a b Lincoln, pp. 42–43
  5. ^ a b c d e Wright, p. 131
  6. ^ Rasputin, pp. 38–40
  7. ^ a b Wright, pp. 131–132
  8. ^ Qtd. in Lincoln, pg. 41
  9. ^ Qtd. in Armstrong, pg. 12
  10. ^ a b Semyonov, pg. 63
  11. ^ a b Rasputin, pg. 38
  12. ^ Rasputin, pp. 38–39
  13. ^ a b c d Rasputin, pg. 40
  14. ^ a b c d e Semyonov, pg. 65
  15. ^ a b Armstrong, pp. 10–11
  16. ^ a b Semyonov, pg. 67
  17. ^ Armstrong, p. 11
  18. ^ a b Semyonov, pg. 66
  19. ^ Kivelson, pg. 206
  20. ^ Semyonov, pg. 64
  21. ^ Lincoln, p. 29
  22. ^ Lincoln, pp. 36–37
  23. ^ a b Rasputin, p. 41
  24. ^ a b Kivelson, p. 119
  25. ^ a b Lincoln, p. 38
  26. ^ Lincoln, p. 39
  27. ^ Lincoln, pp. 39–42
  28. ^ Armstrong, p. 40
  29. ^ Armstrong, pp. 4–6
  30. ^ Armstrong, p. 5
  31. ^ a b c d Semyonov, p. 72
  32. ^ a b c Semyonov, p. 74
  33. ^ a b c Lincoln, p. 42
  34. ^ Armstrong, p. 7
  35. ^ Semyonov, p. 73
  36. ^ Armstrong, p. 50
  37. ^ Wright, pp. 127–128
  38. ^ a b c Howe, p. 215
  39. ^ a b c d Wright, p. 128
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h Haywood, p. 18
  41. ^ a b c d Wright, p. 129
  42. ^ Howe, p. 216
  43. ^ Semyonov, p. 80
  44. ^ Howe, pp. 217–218
  45. ^ Cresson, p. 58
  46. ^ Howe, p. 219
  47. ^ a b c March, p. 29
  48. ^ Cresson, p. 59
  49. ^ a b Semyonov, p. 81
  50. ^ Howe, p. 220
  51. ^ Howe, pp. 220–221
  52. ^ Curtin, p. 10
  53. ^ a b c d Cresson, p. 60
  54. ^ a b c d e f Wright, p. 130
  55. ^ a b c d e f g h Curtin, p. 11
  56. ^ Naumov & Collins, p. 58
  57. ^ Howe, p.221
  58. ^ Howe, p. 222
  59. ^ a b c d e Semyenov, p. 82
  60. ^ Howe, p. 223
  61. ^ a b c Semyonov, p. 83
  62. ^ a b c Semyonov, pp. 82–83
  63. ^ Howe, p. 224
  64. ^ Howe, p. 225
  65. ^ a b Landers
  66. ^ Naumov & Collins, p. 157
  67. ^ a b c d Semyonov, p. 84
  68. ^ Tolstoi, p. 49
  69. ^ a b Cresson, p. 62
  70. ^ Howe, p. 227
  71. ^ a b Wright, p. 132
  72. ^ a b c Haywood, p. 19
  73. ^ Curtin, p. 12
  74. ^ a b Perkhavko, p. 55
  75. ^ a b Bisher, p. 4
  76. ^ Wright, p. 133
  77. ^ Cresson, p. 63
  78. ^ March, p. 30
  79. ^ Curtin, p. 13
  80. ^ Wright, p. 135
  81. ^ Kerner, p. 138
  82. ^ Baikalov, p. 561
  83. ^ Haywood, p. 20
  84. ^ Czaplicka & Urquhart, p. 161
  85. ^ Czaplicka & Urquhart, pp. 161–162
  86. ^ Feordoroff, p. 120
  87. ^ "Monument to the legendary Cossack Ermak – Sights – the Official Web site of the City of Novocherkassk".
  88. ^ a b Armstrong, p. 12
  89. ^ a b c Armstrong, p. 13
  90. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-12-23.
  91. ^ Franklin and Widdis, p. 44
  92. ^ Franklin and Widdis, 44–45
  93. ^ Franklin and Widdis, p. 45
  94. ^ "Ermak (TV Mini Series 1996– )". IMDb.
  95. ^ Stites, p. 44
  96. ^ Longworth
  97. ^ a b Manning, pp. 206–207
  98. ^ a b Armstrong, p. 14
  99. ^ Armstrong, pp. 14–15

References edit

This article incorporates text from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia

  • Armstrong, Terence E. Yermak's Campaign in Siberia: A Selection of Documents. London: Hakluyt Society, 1975.
  • Baikalov, Anatole V.. The Conquest and Colonisation of Siberia. The Slavonic and East European Review 10, no. 30 (1932): 557–571.
  • Bisher, Jamie. White Terror: Cossack Warlords of the Trans-Siberian. London: Frank Cass, 2005.
  • Cresson, W. P.. The Cossacks: Their History and Country. New York: Brentano's, 1919.
  • Czaplicka, Miss, and Leslie Urquhart. The Future of Siberia: Discussion. The Geographical Journal 51, no. 3 (1918): 159–164.
  • Feodoroff, Nicholas V. Soviet Communists and Russian History: A Frame in Time. Commack, NY: Nova Science, 1997.
  • Franklin, Simon, and Emma Widdis. National Identity in Russian Culture: An Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
  • Haywood, A. J.. Siberia: A Cultural History. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010.
  • Howe, Sonia E.. Some Russian Heroes, Saints and Sinners, Legendary and Historical. London: Williams and Norgate, 1916.
  • Kerner, Robert Joseph. The Russian Eastward Movement: Some Observations on its Historical Significance. Berkeley: Pacific Historical Review, 1948.
  • Kivelson, Valerie A. Cartographies of Tsardom: The Land and Its Meanings in Seventeenth-Century Russia. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2006.
  • Landers, Brian. Empires Apart: A History of American and Russian Imperialism. New York: Pegasus Books :, 2010.
  • Lincoln, W. Bruce. The Conquest of a Continent: Siberia and the Russians. New York: Random House, 1994.
  • Longworth, Philip. The Cossacks. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1969.
  • Manning, Clarence Augustus. "Yermak Timofeyevich in Russian Folk Poetry." Journal of the American Oriental Society 43 (1923): 206–215. https://www.jstor.org/stable/593339 (accessed January 13, 2012).
  • March, G. Patrick. Eastern Destiny: Russia in Asia and the North Pacific. Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1996.
  • "Monument to the legendary Cossack Ermak – Sights." The Official Website of the City of Novocherkassk. http://www.novochgrad.ru/en/sights/id/1873.html (accessed January 14, 2012).
  • Naumov, I. V., and David Norman Collins. The History of Siberia. London: Routledge, 2006.
  • Perkhavko, Valery. Soft Gold. Science in Russia 4 (2008): 50–56.
  • Rasputin, Valentin. Siberia, Siberia. Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press, 1996.
  • Semyenov, Yuri. The Conquest of Siberia. Ed. E. W. Dickes. London: G. Routledge & Sons, Ltd., 1944.
  • Stites, Richard. Russian Popular Culture: Entertainment and Society Since 1900. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1992. Print.
  • Wright, G. Frederick. Asiatic Russia,. New York: McClure, Phillips & co., 1902.
  • "Yermak (1996) – IMDb." The Internet Movie Database (IMDb). https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0126894/ (accessed January 17, 2012).

External links edit

yermak, timofeyevich, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, customs, patronymic, timofeyevich, other, uses, yermak, disambiguation, russian, Ермак, Тимофеевич, jɪrˈmak, tʲɪmɐˈfʲejɪvʲɪt, born, between, 1532, august, 1585, cossack, ataman, today, h. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs the patronymic is Timofeyevich For other uses see Yermak disambiguation Yermak Timofeyevich Russian Ermak Timofeevich IPA jɪrˈmak tʲɪmɐˈfʲejɪvʲɪt ɕ born between 1532 August 5 or 6 1585 was a Cossack ataman and is today a hero in Russian folklore and myths During the reign of the Russian tsar Ivan the Terrible Yermak started the Russian conquest of Siberia Yermak Timofeyevich17th century portrait of Yermak the first Russian leader of the exploration and conquest of SiberiaBornbetween 1532Along Chusovaya River Dvina River Kama River or Don River RussiaDiedAugust 5 or 6 1585 aged 43 53 Sibiryak Qashliq Khanate of Sibir RussiaOccupationsSoldierExplorerPorterSailorRiver pirateKnown forThe Cossack who led the Russian exploration and conquest of Siberia in the reign of Tsar Ivan the Terrible Russians fur trade interests fueled their desire to expand east into Siberia The Tatar Khanate of Kazan was established by Ulugh Muhammad as the best entryway into Siberia In 1552 Ivan the Terrible s modernized army toppled the khanate 1 After the takeover of Kazan the tsar looked to the powerful and affluent Stroganov merchant family to spearhead the eastward expansion In the late 1570s the Stroganovs recruited Cossack fighters to invade Asia on behalf of the tsar 2 These Cossacks elected Yermak as the leader of their armed forces and in 1582 Yermak set out with an army of 840 to attack the Khanate of Sibir 3 On October 26 1582 Yermak and his soldiers overthrew Kuchum Khan s Tatar empire at Qashliq in a battle that marked the conquest of Siberia 4 Yermak remained in Siberia and continued his struggle against the Tatars until 1584 when a raid organized by Kuchum Khan ambushed and killed him and his party 5 The specifics of Yermak s life such as his appearance background and dates of events remain points of controversy for historians because the texts that document his life are not reliable 6 However his life and conquests had a profound influence on Siberian relations sparking Russian interest in the region and establishing the Tsardom of Russia as an imperial power east of the Urals 7 Contents 1 Authenticity 2 Early life 2 1 Ancestry 2 2 Occupation 3 Conquest background 4 Conquest of Siberia 5 Yermak s death 6 Legacy 7 Commemoration 8 In popular culture 8 1 Film 8 2 Literature 8 3 Folk songs and poetry 8 4 Paintings 8 5 Videogames 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksAuthenticity editThere is less information about Yermak than most other notable explorers and historical figures Much of what we know about Yermak is derived from folklore and legend There are no contemporary descriptions of Yermak and all portraits are merely estimations 3 One of the Siberian chronicles the Remezov Chronicle written more than one hundred years after Yermak s death describes him as flat faced black of beard with curly hair of medium stature and thick set and broad shouldered 8 9 but even this detailed account is not reliable because the narrator had never seen Yermak 3 In addition to his physical features being unknown the details of Yermak s life and the circumstances leading up to his excursion into Siberia are obscure 10 Russian writer Valentin Rasputin laments the lack of information that we have about Yermak considering the vast scope of his contributions to Russian society 11 Knowledge of Yermak s upbringing and voyages pales in comparison to that of other explorers 12 Historians encounter serious difficulties when attempting to piece together the specifics of Yermak s life and exploits because the two key primary sources about Yermak may be biased or inaccurate These sources are the Stroganov Chronicle and the Sinodnik The Stroganov Chronicle was commissioned by the Stroganov family itself therefore it exaggerates the family s involvement in the conquest of Siberia The Sinodik is an account of Yermak s campaign written forty years after his death by the archbishop of Tobolsk Cyprian Kipriyan The text was formed based on oral tradition and memories of his expedition but almost certainly was affected by the archbishop s desire to canonize Yermak 13 14 The combination of forgotten details over time and the embellishment or omission of facts in order for Yermak to be accepted as a saint suggests that the Sinodik could be erroneous 13 Though Cyprian failed to canonize Yermak he made an effort to immortalize the warrior who he considered being the Grand Inquisitor of Siberia 14 These documents along with the various others that chronicle Yermak s expeditions are filled with contradictions that make the truth about Yermak s life difficult to discern 10 While the sources that exist on Yermak are fallible those accounts along with folklore and legend are all that historians have to base their knowledge on therefore they are widely accepted and considered to reflect the truth 13 Early life editAncestry edit The Don Cossack warrior Yermak Timofeyevich was born by the Chusovaya River on the eastern fringes of the Muscovite lands The only information about Yermak s upbringing comes from a source called the Cherepanov Chronicle This chronicle compiled by a Tobolsk coachman in 1760 long after Yermak s death was never published in full but in 1894 historian Aleksandr Alekseyevich A A Dmitrieyev concluded it probably represents a copy or paraphrase of an authentic 17th century document According to the section of the chronicle entitled On Yermak and where he was born it is stated that Yermak s grandfather Afonasiy Grigor yevich Alenin came from Suzdal north east of Moscow 15 To escape poverty he moved south to Vladimir where he became a coachman in the Murom forests In the Murom forests the voyevoda arrested him for driving unscrupulous passengers robbers who had hired him Afonasiy s son Yermak s father Timofey relocated to the Stroganov lands on the Chusovaya in order to make money 15 16 Occupation edit Yermak worked in the Stroganovs river fleet as a porter and a sailor transporting salt along the Kama and the Volga rivers Growing tired of his work he assembled a gang left his employment and moved to the Don citation needed region to become a river pirate Among his fellow Cossack bandits he acquired the nickname Yermak 16 17 Prior to his conquest of Siberia Yermak s combat experience consisted of leading a Cossack detachment for the tsar in the Livonian War of 1558 83 and plundering merchant ships 3 11 18 Based on legends and folk songs for years Yermak had been involved in robbing and plundering on the Volga with the hetman Ivan Kolzo and four other Cossack leaders 14 Historian Valerie Kivelson refers to Yermak s group as his gang of thugs 19 Like many other Cossacks Yermak s gang was involved in the thieves trade vorovskim remeslom 13 It was typical of Cossacks to engage in piracy on the Sea of Azov or the Caspian Sea and to rob various envoys and Russian or Persian merchants 20 Though a bandit Yermak earned a reputation as an eminent and loyal Russian fighter Through his experience fighting in the Livonian War he learned war tactics and excelled beyond the other hetmans in skill 18 Conquest background edit nbsp Messengers from Yermak at the Red Porch in front of Ivan the Terrible by Stanislaw Jakub Rostworowski In the late 1500s prior to Yermak s expeditions the Russians attempted to push eastward into Siberia in search of furs Under Ivan the Great the Russians entered northwest Siberia but to approach Siberia from that direction proved too arduous and difficult even in the best of times 21 The Russians decided that taking a southern route through the Tatar khanate of Kazan would allow them to penetrate Siberia more easily but Kazan would need to be overthrown first Ivan the Terrible s first foreign objective upon rising to power was to take Kazan Ivan the Terrible s modernized army proved successful at the beginning of October 1552 and Ivan proceeded to open up the east to enterprising Russian individuals such as the Stroganovs Anika Stroganov used the former khanate of Kazan as an entryway into Siberia and established a private empire on the southwest corner of Siberia 1 Following the Russian conquest under Ivan the Terrible the Tatar khanate of Kazan became the Russian province of Perm Ivan the Terrible had tremendous trust in the entrepreneurial prowess of the Stroganov family and granted them the province of Perm as a financial investment which would be sure to benefit Russia in the future 22 The tsar also gave the Stroganovs permission to expand into the territory along the Tobol and Irtysh Rivers which belonged to the Muslim leader Kuchum Khan 23 The Stroganovs proceeded to launch expeditions eastward into non Russian territories 24 25 They pushed into the khanate of Sibir the sister state of the former khanate of Kazan because it maintained control over Siberia s fur in the west 25 nbsp A portrait fantasy from the late 18th centuryDuring the time of the Russian conquest of Kazan in the 1540s and 1550s Sibir had been undergoing conflicts of its own with rival clans The khanate was on the precarious ground until the rise of Kuchum Khan a descendant of the famed Chingis Khan in the 1560s 24 26 Kuchum Khan built up allies among his neighbors and the Crimean Tatars in order to thwart the Stroganovs expansion across the Urals In July 1572 Kuchum launched his first raid on Stroganov settlements which resulted in almost one hundred deaths In 1573 the Tatar army expanded and changed leadership Kuchum s nephew Mahmet kul assumed control of the Tatar army The Stroganovs realized that they could no longer expect their settlers to remain in the lands around Perm if they only fought a defensive battle The tsar granted the Stroganov family permission to invade Asia 27 However the tsar soon changed his mind and told the Stroganovs to retract from Siberia fearing that Russia did not have the resources or manpower to topple Kuchum Khan s empire 2 The Stroganovs decided to ignore the tsar s orders and in the late 1570s Anika Stroganov s grandsons Nikita and Maksim recruited Cossack fighters to wage war on their behalf They elected the Cossack chieftain Yermak Timofeyevich as the leader of the Cossack brigades 2 According to the Stroganov Chronicle on April 6 1579 after hearing of Yermak s and his comrades daring and bravery the Stroganovs sent a letter to the men asking them to come to their ancestral estates in Chusovaya and summoning them to fight against the Tatars in the name of the tsar 28 Since Yermak had been the most illustrious of the recruits he became the captain ataman of the conquest of Siberia 2 14 However there remains the question as to whether Yermak in fact decided to fight the war of his own accord without being pursued by the Stroganovs This question arose due to the discrepancy between the narratives of the Stroganov Chronicle and a different Siberian chronicle the Yespiov Chronicle The Stroganov Chronicle portrays the family as the motivating force behind Yermak s campaign while the Yesipov Chronicle fails even to mention the family 29 Perhaps the Stroganovs told the story in a way that would inspire the Russian people to feel just as indebted to them as to Yermak for the conquest of Siberia Siberian historians are divided on the matter some believing that the Stroganovs were behind Yermak s campaign and others believing that they played no part in it 30 Conquest of Siberia editMain article Conquest of the Khanate of Sibir nbsp Yermak used river portages to get from the Chusovaya River to the Tagil River Yermak was officially enlisted by the Stroganovs in the spring of 1582 3 His quest was to take de facto possession of the country along the Tobol and the Irtysh which was already de jure in the Stroganovs possession under the Tsar s charter of 1574 31 The Stroganovs ultimate goal was to open up a southern passageway to Mangaseya to access its furs 31 The Khanate of Sibir blocked the road from the Urals to Mangaseya 32 After overthrowing the khanate the intended final destination of Yermak s five thousand mile journey was the Bering Strait Yermak led a small army of 840 men made up of 540 of his own followers and three hundred supplied by the Stroganovs 3 14 31 His army was composed of Russians Tatars Lithuanians and Germans The Lithuanians and Germans of the crew came from the Lithuanian front 31 Nikita and Maksim Stroganov spent twenty thousand rubles of their riches to outfit the army with the best weapons available This was especially to the advantage of the Russian detachment because their Tatar opponents did not have industrial weapons According to Russian history specialist W Bruce Lincoln the Tatars bows arrows and spears went up against Yermak s team s matchlock muskets sabers pikes and several small cannons 33 However according to the Russian author Yuri Semyonov Yermak had no cannon and only a small number of his men carried firearms The Cossacks had not a single horse while Kuchum and his men were mounted His cavalry could move quickly in any direction while the Cossacks were tied to their rafts which were laden with all their supplies 32 Yermak first embarked on his journey through Siberia from a frontier fort in Perm on the Chusovaya River on September 1 1582 33 though other sources claim that he may have started his campaign in 1579 or 1581 23 34 When navigating down rivers the crew used high sided boats that originated in Russia Throughout their journey they encountered violent opposition from Kuchum Khan s native allies but the high sides of their boats acted as shields 33 When crossing the Urals the Cossacks had to carry their possessions on their backs because they did not have horses 35 After two months Yermak s army had finally crossed the Urals They followed the river Tura and found themselves at the outskirts of Kuchum Khan s empire Soon they reached the kingdom s capital city of Qashliq On October 23 1582 Yermak s army fought the Battle of Chuvash Cape which initiated three days of fighting against Kuchum s nephew Mehmet kul and the Tatar army Yermak s infantry blocked the Tatar charge with mass musket fire which wounded Mahmet kul and prevented the Tatars from scoring a single Russian casualty Yermak succeeded in capturing Qashliq and the battle came to mark the conquest of Siberia 4 The Stroganov Chronicle provides an account of Kuchum Khan s reaction to the attack on Qashliq and Yermak s success Khan Kuchyum seeing his ruin and the loss of his kingdom and riches said to all his men with bitter lamentation O murzas and princes let us flee without delaying The Stroganovs sent men of the common people against me from their forts to avenge on me the evil I had inflicted they sent the atamans and Cossacks Yermak and his comrades with not many of their men He came upon us defeated us and did us such great harm 36 While Yermak had succeeded in taking Qashliq the battle had reduced his Cossack force to 500 men 37 38 Yermak also now faced a supply problem While the army had found treasures such as fur silk and gold in the Tatar city no food or provisions had been left behind 39 The inhabitants had also fled the city preventing their enlistment for aid However four days after Yermak claimed Qashliq the people returned and Yermak soon befriended the Ostyak people 38 The Ostyaks would formally declare their allegiance to Yermak on October 30 complementing their pledge by delivering offerings of food to the city 39 nbsp Vasily Surikov s 1895 painting Yermak s Conquest of Siberia Yermak used the Ostyak tributes to feed his band of Cossacks throughout the winter 38 However these supplies proved to be insufficient and the Cossacks soon ventured into the wilderness to fish and hunt 39 The Cossacks task was not without trouble as although Yermak had defeated the Tatars they continued to harass the Cossacks preventing Yermak from establishing complete control over the region 40 The Tatars struck a decisive blow on December 20 when a Cossack party of twenty men were discovered and slain Upon their failure to return Yermak left the city to investigate eventually finding that Mahmet kul had recovered from their earlier battle and was responsible for the Cossacks murder Yermak then entered into battle with Mahmet kul and his forces defeating him once again 39 The defeat of Mahmet kul provided a brief respite to the Cossacks However in April 1583 he returned to the region 41 In an unfortunate twist of fate Mahmet kul was quickly ambushed and captured by a small party of Cossacks whose numbers ranged from as little as 10 41 to as many as 50 42 A few days after his capture Mahmet kul sent a messenger to Kuchum stating that he was alive and in good health He also requested that the Khan cease attacks on the Cossacks and those bringing tribute to Yermak 43 Yermak taking advantage of this lull in hostilities set out down the Irtysh and Ob to complete his subjugation of the local tribal princes He soon encountered the Ostyak prince Demian who had fortified himself in a fortress on the banks of the Irtysh with 2 000 loyal fighters It is reported to have taken Yermak and his men considerable time to break through their defenses due to Demian s possession of a gilded idol Yermak s forces eventually prevailed however upon entering the fort no idol was found After dispersing a group of priests and warriors by brandishing their firearms Yermak determined to subdue the most influential Ostyak prince of the region Samar who had joined forces with eight other princes Yermak noting that Samar had failed to place guards around his encampment launched a surprise attack killing Samar and disbanding his forces Yermak was then able to secure tribute from the eight other princes After this conquest he continued down the river succeeding in capturing the key Ostyak town of Nazym Yermak s friend Ataman Nikita Pan and several Cossacks lost their lives in the battle Yermak then directed his forces down the river Ob conquering several small forts After reaching a point at which the river broadened to a point of three or four versts Yermak halted the expedition and returned his forces to Qashliq 44 Upon returning to Qashliq Yermak decided to inform the Stroganovs and the tsar of his conquests While his reasons for this are unclear experts believe that in addition to wishing to clear his name of earlier misdeeds 45 Yermak also desperately needed supplies 40 To his end he sent his trusted lieutenant Ivan Kolzo with fifty men two letters one each for the Stroganovs and Ivan the Terrible and a large assortment of furs for the tsar 40 41 46 The exact amount sent to the tsar is disputed as descriptions range from 2 500 47 to 5 000 40 to sixty sacks 48 of furs Kozo s arrival at the Stroganovs was well timed as Maksim Stroganov had just received a letter from Ivan denouncing Yermak and threatening him and his followers with death 49 Kolzo bearing news of Kuchum s defeat Mahmet kul s capture and the subjugation of Tatar lands was thus well received by a relieved Maksim 50 Maksim provided Kolzo with lodging food and money before sending him on his way 49 Kolzo upon reaching Moscow was granted an audience with Ivan despite having a Muscovite bounty on his head 47 To the detriment of Moscow s interests the Livonian War had just been ended and Ivan had begun receiving reports of local tribesman conducting raids in Perm 47 putting him in a foul mood Upon reading the news born by Kolzo concerning the extension of his dominion Ivan became overjoyed immediately pardoning the Cossacks and proclaiming Yermak to be a hero of the first degree 41 The triumphant atmosphere extended across the city as church bells were tolled throughout Moscow to glorify Yermak 51 Ivan then had many gifts prepared for Yermak including his personal fur mantle a goblet two suits of armor emblazoned with bronze double headed eagles and money 52 Ivan also commanded that a band of streltsy be sent to reinforce Yermak 53 Reports differ on whether 300 53 54 55 or 500 56 57 men were sent The Stroganovs were also ordered to support this group with an additional fifty men upon their arrival in Perm 53 Yermak was bestowed the title Prince of Siberia by Ivan 58 who also commanded that Mahmet kul be sent to Moscow 59 Upon returning to Qashliq Kolzo informed Yermak of the tsar s command that Mahmet kul be delivered to him Yermak aware that doing so would eliminate Kuchum s only motive for peace nonetheless obeyed the tsar and arranged for his transport Unsurprisingly Kuchum s forces began to increase the frequency of their raids 59 Yermak now found himself in a predicament as a long winter had prevented the gathering of supplies and tributes and the tsar s reinforcements had not yet arrived 60 Under orders from the tsar the Stroganovs had contributed fifty cavalries to the reinforcement party However the horses had slowed the party to a crawl across the Siberia landscape and they did not even cross the Urals until the spring of 1584 61 In September 1583 a call for help from a Tatar leader named Karacha was delivered to Yermak begging for assistance against the Nogai Tatars 55 Yermak wary of Karacha but nonetheless disposed to help deployed Kolzo with a force of 40 Cossacks Karacha however was not to be trusted as Kolzo and his men walked into an ambush and were all killed Now without Kolzo Yermak was left with a little more than 300 men 59 Sensing Yermak s waning power the tribes previously under his control revolted 54 and Qashliq soon came under siege by a collective army of Tatars Voguls and Ostyaks 59 Cleverly they encircled the city with a line of wagons both preventing passage to and from the city while protecting the attackers from the Russians firearms 54 Yermak despite having limited supplies was able to endure the blockade for three months 59 However the Cossacks could not last forever and on the cloudy night of June 12 1584 Yermak decided to act Stealthily penetrating the line of wagons Yermak s men were able to surprise the gathered forces in their sleep killing a large number 54 As Karacha s forces had been caught completely unaware Yermak was able to recover a substantial amount of provisions from the barricade 55 Karacha having failed in his mission was punished by Kuchum who sentenced Karacha s two sons to death 62 Karacha fueled by the loss of his sons regrouped the native tribes and returned to assault Yermak the next day 62 63 Karacha s forces however were soundly defeated as the Cossacks were able to kill one hundred men with only two dozen deaths of their own 62 Defeated and disgraced Karacha fled south to the steppes of the Ishim where Kuchum waited 54 Freed from confinement Yermak turned to the offensive conquering many towns and forts to the east of Qashliq and extending the tsar s dominion 64 Having already regained the loyalty of the revolting tribes Yermak continued sailing up the Irtysh throughout the summer of 1584 to subdue tribes and demand tribute 55 61 Although he attempted to search for Karacha Yermak was ultimately unsuccessful in this venture 55 Also while Yermak had succeeded in regaining the loyalty of the tribes his men were now almost completely out of gunpowder 61 To make matters worse while his reinforcements arrived they did so utterly exhausted and depleted by scurvy Indeed many of the men including their commanding officer had not survived the journey 54 Thus in addition to facing the problem of escalating hostilities their food shortage was magnified by the arrival of more men 53 Eventually it is reported the situation grew dire enough that Yermak s men turned to cannibalism eating the bodies of the deceased 65 Yermak s death editThe precise details of Yermak s death are lost to history but legend has preserved multiple variations of the account 40 With the onset and worsening of the food shortage Yermak s people had now entered a time of famine Kuchum knowing this set a trap 66 The most common account is that Kuchum purposely leaked information to Yermak in which it was claimed that Bukharan merchants from Central Asia traveling with large amounts of food were being prevented from moving by Kuchum s men 40 In August 1584 Yermak set out with a band of men to free the traders Finding the reports to be false Yermak ordered a return to Qashliq 55 Whether because of an ongoing storm 55 or because the men were tired from rowing upstream 67 Yermak s force stopped on a small island formed by two branches of the Irtysh and set up camp on the night of August 4 5 1584 40 67 Convinced that the river offered protection Yermak s men fell asleep with no guard Kuchum however had been following Yermak s party and was lying in wait Kuchum s forces forded the river around midnight their approach was hidden by the loudness of the storm and the dark of night 5 Kuchum s Tatars were upon Yermak s men so quickly that they could not use either their guns or weapons and a slaughter ensued 40 In the ensuing chaos it is reported that all but three men on the Russian side were killed including Yermak 5 Legend has it that after fighting through the invaders 65 and being wounded in the arm by a knife 68 Yermak finding that their boats had been washed away in the storm attempted to cross the river Due to the weight of the armor gifted to him by the Tsar Yermak sank to the bottom and drowned 5 At least one survivor unburdened by such heavy armor was able to flee across the river and return to Qashliq with news of Yermak s death citation needed Yermak s body was borne down the river where seven days later it is said to have been found by a Tatar fisherman named Yanish 55 Easily recognizable by the eagle on his armor Yermak s corpse was stripped and hung on a frame made out of six poles where for six weeks archers used his body for target practice 69 However it is said that animals did not feed on him and his body produced no odor and that the corpse caused fear and nightmares in the people Heeding these omens the Tatars buried him as a hero killing thirty oxen in his name 69 70 His prized armor was eventually distributed among the Tatar chiefs 5 Legacy editUpon receiving news of Yermak s death the Cossacks became immediately demoralized 71 The original band of men had dwindled to 150 fighters 72 and command now fell to Glukhoff the leader of the initial group of reinforcements that the tsar had delivered to Yermak 73 The Cossacks soon decided to abandon Qashliq and to retreat to Russia Before traveling a great distance they ran into a group of one hundred reinforcements that had been sent as additional strength from the tsar With this upturn in fortune Yermak s band resolved to return to Qashliq and refortify their position in accordance with the tsar s will The fast acting and perceptive Tatars however had been informed of the group s flight and had retaken the city almost immediately preventing any peaceful reoccupation of their former stronghold Although the Tatar position appeared strong they were no longer led by Kuchum who had lost his power and were thus not as stable as before Furthermore another three hundred reinforcements from the tsar soon arrived to join the Russians Led by Tchulkoff this new force provided a significant boost in fighting strength to the party Despite the tumultuous state of the Tatar leadership and their newly received recruits however the Russians did not pursue another attempt on Qashliq Instead in a culmination of the events immediately following Yermak s fatal plunge they founded a new settlement in 1587 on the site of what would become Tobolsk a comfortable twelve miles from Qashliq Although the Tatars quickly began raids against their familiar foe after a short period they ceased leaving the Russians to their new town 71 Yermak s heroic endeavors in the Russian East laid the groundwork for future Russian expansion and settlement Soon after Yermak and his initial band set out for Siberia merchants and peasants followed in their wake hoping to harness some of the fur riches that abounded in the land 74 This trend grew exponentially after Yermak s death as his legend spread through the domain rapidly and with it the news of a land rich in furs and vulnerable to Russian influence 75 Colonization attempts soon followed as Tyumen the first known town after Yermak s death was founded in 1586 72 The settling of this territory facilitated the establishment and development of Siberian agriculture Most of these farmers were in fact soldiers who grew their own sustenance out of necessity 76 Yermak had set a precedent of Cossack involvement in Siberian expansion and the exploration and conquests of these men were responsible for many of the additions to the Russian empire in the east 77 After the initial return of the Cossacks shortly after Yermak s death an ambitious project of fortification began under the direction of Tsar Boris Godunov Its achievements including the extension of protection for Russians in the region would drive even greater numbers of entrepreneurs to Siberia 78 In 1590 Tobolsk received a significant boost in prominence as it was dubbed the principal city and administrative center of the region 79 The fur trade also continued to grow aided by the Cossacks who in 1593 established the trading center of Berezof on the Ob River at the sixty fourth latitude 80 The practice of collecting tributes of fur from the natives continued to spread and in the 17th century such furs made up 25 33 percent of the income to the tsar s treasury 74 Thus as soon as fifteen years after Yermak s death the basin of the Ob River had truly become a region of Russian influence 81 Even so the Russians did not rest on their laurels and the attitude and pace of expansion pioneered by Yermak continued well into the 17th century Indeed within the first half of the century the fort of Yeniseysk was established in 1619 the city of Yakutsk founded in 1632 and the important feat of reaching the Sea of Okhotsk on the Pacific coast in 1639 72 Throughout these campaigns Yermak s influence was undeniable as the pace he had established for achievement in his relatively short time in Siberia heralded a new age of Russian pioneering citation needed Yermak s life and conquests had a significant impact on Russian policy towards Siberia and the colonization attempts that followed this shift Prior to Yermak s agreement with the Strogonovs the Russian attitude towards the Siberian expanse had been one preoccupied primarily with defense not aggression The top priority was the repelling of the Tatar hordes and as shown by Ivan s letter to the Strogonovs the central government rarely involved itself unless the tribes succeeded in entering Russian territory This of course changed with Yermak whose triumphs showed that the Tatars could be put on the defensive and that Russia could now establish itself as an aggressive power in the East 7 Yermak also changed the involvement of the tsar in Siberian affairs In reaching out to the tsar for assistance Yermak gained the support of the government indeed it was reinforcements from the tsar that solidified the Russian presence in the region immediately after Yermak s death 82 This newfound commitment and involvement in the area is best summarized by Ivan s acceptance of the title bestowed upon him by Yermak Tsar of Sibir Yermak s pioneering further enabled this system to exist because it depended on the success he achieved in gaining tribute from conquered peoples Much like Yermak future troops were sent with the understanding that it would be necessary to supplement their base payment with treasures and tributes gained from conquest 83 Without this system in place it is unlikely such an arrangement would have come to fruition citation needed Future explorers would also take notice of Yermak s strategy in approaching the Siberian lands which unlike those in many other colonization attempts already had an established imperial power However Yermak wisely recognized that Kuchum s territories were not unified Yermak noted that many of these peoples were nothing more than vassals and that they were quite diverse in terms of race language and religion Unlike Kuchum and his Mohammedan Tatars many of these groups were pagan Due to the sum of these differences many simply paid tribute to avoid trouble and it mattered little to whom the tribute was paid Yermak s unique strength was thus in recognizing the bigger picture and playing it to his advantage first identifying and then executing quick efficient ways to establish influence in the region 32 The actions of Yermak also redefined the meaning of the word Cossack While it is uncertain whether Yermak s group was related in any way to the Yaik or Ural Cossacks it is known that their company was previously outlawed by the Russian government However in sending his letter and his trusted lieutenant Ivan Kolzo to Ivan the Terrible Yermak transformed the image of the Cossack overnight from a bandit to a soldier recognized by the Tsar of Moscow Now Yermak s Cossacks had effectively been incorporated into the military system and were able to receive support from the tsar 84 This new arrangement also acted as a sort of pressure relief valve for the Cossacks who had a history of being troublesome on the Russian frontier In sending as many of them as possible further east into unconquered lands the burgeoning and extremely profitable lands on the borders of Russian territory were given respite 75 Yermak s call for aid thus spawned a new type of Cossack which by virtue of its link to the government would enjoy significant favor from future Russian rulers Despite this new shift in orientation it is worth noting that the Cossack name remained in place in Siberia and that soldiers sent as reinforcements often adopted this title 85 Furthermore this realignment was not without criticism however and some saw Yermak as a traitor to the Cossack name Such detractors saw Yermak s death as punishment for turning away from the Cossack code and becoming a pawn of the tsar Fittingly then it was his armor the very symbol of the tsar that dragged him down to his fate 67 Relics of Yermak also continued to command significant power and prestige years after his death In particular the search for his armor affected at least one element of Siberian relations Decades after Yermak s death a Mongol leader who had assisted the Russian government approached the voyevoda of Tobolsk and asked for his assistance in obtaining an item in the Tatar s possession believed to be Yermak s armor The reason he approached the voyevoda was that he had previously been denied a trade by the Tatars after offering them ten slave families and a thousand sheep The Tatars despite being convinced that the armor had divine properties agreed to the sale upon the involvement of the voyevoda Soon after the Mongol convinced of the power of Yermak s armor refused to service the Russian government because he no longer feared their might 67 Commemoration edit nbsp Yermak on the Millennium of Russia monument in NovgorodMultiple statues and monuments have been erected in his honor throughout Russia V A Beklemishev began his construction project for a monument dedicated to Yermak in 1903 in the Cathedral Square of Novocherkassk the capital of the Don Cossack country On the monument Yermak is shown holding his regimental banner in his left hand and the ceremonial cap of his rival Kuchum Khan in his right hand 86 The back of the monument reads To the Don Cossack Ataman Ermak Timofeyevich the Siberia conqueror from the grateful posterity In honor of Don Cossack Army 300th Anniversary He passed away in Irtysh waves on August 5 1584 87 Some believe that Yermak was born in the village of Kachalinskaya on the Don Though this region has long claimed Yermak to be one of its own there is no evidence that he was born there or ever visited 88 nbsp Statue of Yermak in NovocherkasskThere is also a statue of Yermak at Tobolsk and one in the State Russian Museum in Saint Petersburg designed by Mark Antokolsky 88 Two icebreakers have been named after Yermak The first built in Newcastle England in 1898 was one of the first major vessels of that type ever built and the second which entered the service in 1974 was the first of an impressive new type of ship 89 In commemoration of Yermak there is a town named after him on the upper Irtysh 89 Similarly a mountain in the Perm Region made up of three cliff stacks is called the Yermak Stone after Yermak Legend has it that Yermak and his brigade passed one of the harsh Siberian winters on the cliff side 90 In popular culture editFilm editYermak makes an appearance in the 1947 film Tale of the Siberian Land Skazanie o zemle sibirskoi directed by Ivan Pyryev The movie tells the story of a pianist named Andrei who moves to Siberia to work at a paper processing plant after being wounded in World War II and losing his faith in music Once in Siberia Andrei reunites with a female singer with whom he had been in love in Moscow When nothing comes of their second encounter he heads far north in Siberia and becomes so enamored with the might of Soviet construction projects that he composes a choral symphony entitled the Tale of Siberian Land Andrei is then reunited with his beloved who finds him in the depths of Siberia The two travel to Moscow where Andrei s symphony is performed in the Conservatory The symphony tells his life story while presenting the mysterious wild silver grey landscape of Siberia to the audience In displaying the extreme might of the land he conveys the extreme heroism of the Russian and Soviet conquest of Siberia The symphony introduces Yermak as a mighty figure who made his way through the fog and mist to do battle with Siberia 91 nbsp Yermak on a Russian postage stamp 2009 The film then begins a visual montage which traces Russian history and the representation of the Russian landscape over time Yermak is shown as a pantomime hero leading his forces into battle Simon Franklin and Emma Widdis describe that here the director taps into the folk imagination and the landscape that he evokes is plainly the landscape of the epic As the battle ends the natural world itself expresses the majesty of Yermak s achievement Fire turns into lightning and then the rain begins the conquest of the elements is complete as nature bows down in the face of Russian strength and Siberia is conquered 92 The montage then shifts to show the landscape as softer flatter and gentler Andrei proceeds to describe the process through which Yermak s descendants continued to dominate Siberia 93 Ultimately Yermak is portrayed as the hero who launched the conquest that shaped the whole of Russia citation needed In 1996 directors Vladimir Krasnopolsky and Valeri Uskov produced the film Yermak a historical drama about the conquest of Siberia which starred Viktor Stepanov Irina Alfyorova and Nikita Dzhigurda 94 Literature edit Yermak the Conqueror of Siberia 1899 by Leo Tolstoy Yermak the Conqueror 1930 a novel by Pyotr Nikolayevich Krassnoff Gulyai Volga 1930 a novel by Artem Vesely 95 The Cossacks 1969 by Philip Longworth a historical account of the Cossack experience in Russia which provides portraits of famous Cossack leaders Yermak Bogdan Khmelnitski and Stepan Razin 96 The Cossacks 1963 OUP by Barbara Bartos Hoppner A fictionalised and dramatised account of the life of Yermak Timofeyev from the point of view of Mitya a young boy who becomes a Cossack and who accompanies Yermak on his invasion of Siberia Trans from the German by Stella Humphries Yermak s Campaign in Siberia 1974 translated from Russian by Tatiana Minorsky and David Wileman and edited with an introduction and notes by Terence Armstrong In addition to his nonfiction portrayals in the books listed above Yermak and his expeditions of conquest are mentioned in The Zombie Survival Guide by Max Brooks as well as being featured in its accompanying tie in comic Recorded Attacks wherein an expeditionary party of Yermak seizes a Siberian settlement of an unknown Asiatic tribe engaging in slaughter and cannabalism before themselves succumbing to a revived apparently zombified woman whom they had dug up leaving only one survivor Folk songs and poetry edit There are many folk songs and much poetry about Yermak which contribute to our vision of the hero By tracing the transformation of folk songs and poetry about Yermak since his death it is possible to see how his status as a legendary figure has evolved over time 97 Over 150 songs about Yermak s exploits have been collected and spread throughout all of Russia since the 18th century 89 As many as 35 of these songs have been collected in a text by V Th Miller entitled Historical Songs of the Russian People of the XVI XVII Centuries 97 One song describes how Yermak s men kill the Muscovite ambassador to Persia named as Semen Konstantinovich Karamyshev while others speak of Yermak s acts of piracy and pillaging with his Cossack brigade 98 Though most folk songs are not entirely consistent with the historical accounts of Yermak s life there are many similarities and much overlap among the different songs There are often several versions of the same song that share certain details but differ on others 99 I I Dmitriyev 1760 1837 wrote the dramatic poem Yermak and K P Ryleyev 1795 1826 in 1821 wrote a poem entitled The death of Yermak 98 Paintings edit The Conquest of Siberia by Yermak 1895 by Vasily Surikov located in the State Russian Museum in St Petersburg various paintings by Semyon Remezov in the Remezov Chronicle Videogames edit Yermak makes an appearance in Age of Empires III Definitive Edition in a standalone scenario based on his conquest of Cape Chuvash as part of the Historical Battles See also edit nbsp Siberia portal History of Siberia Exploration of Siberia Exploration of Asia Russian conquest of Siberia Conquest of the Khanate of SibirNotes edit a b Lincoln p 30 a b c d Lincoln p 40 a b c d e f Lincoln p 41 a b Lincoln pp 42 43 a b c d e Wright p 131 Rasputin pp 38 40 a b Wright pp 131 132 Qtd in Lincoln pg 41 Qtd in Armstrong pg 12 a b Semyonov pg 63 a b Rasputin pg 38 Rasputin pp 38 39 a b c d Rasputin pg 40 a b c d e Semyonov pg 65 a b Armstrong pp 10 11 a b Semyonov pg 67 Armstrong p 11 a b Semyonov pg 66 Kivelson pg 206 Semyonov pg 64 Lincoln p 29 Lincoln pp 36 37 a b Rasputin p 41 a b Kivelson p 119 a b Lincoln p 38 Lincoln p 39 Lincoln pp 39 42 Armstrong p 40 Armstrong pp 4 6 Armstrong p 5 a b c d Semyonov p 72 a b c Semyonov p 74 a b c Lincoln p 42 Armstrong p 7 Semyonov p 73 Armstrong p 50 Wright pp 127 128 a b c Howe p 215 a b c d Wright p 128 a b c d e f g h Haywood p 18 a b c d Wright p 129 Howe p 216 Semyonov p 80 Howe pp 217 218 Cresson p 58 Howe p 219 a b c March p 29 Cresson p 59 a b Semyonov p 81 Howe p 220 Howe pp 220 221 Curtin p 10 a b c d Cresson p 60 a b c d e f Wright p 130 a b c d e f g h Curtin p 11 Naumov amp Collins p 58 Howe p 221 Howe p 222 a b c d e Semyenov p 82 Howe p 223 a b c Semyonov p 83 a b c Semyonov pp 82 83 Howe p 224 Howe p 225 a b Landers Naumov amp Collins p 157 a b c d Semyonov p 84 Tolstoi p 49 a b Cresson p 62 Howe p 227 a b Wright p 132 a b c Haywood p 19 Curtin p 12 a b Perkhavko p 55 a b Bisher p 4 Wright p 133 Cresson p 63 March p 30 Curtin p 13 Wright p 135 Kerner p 138 Baikalov p 561 Haywood p 20 Czaplicka amp Urquhart p 161 Czaplicka amp Urquhart pp 161 162 Feordoroff p 120 Monument to the legendary Cossack Ermak Sights the Official Web site of the City of Novocherkassk a b Armstrong p 12 a b c Armstrong p 13 Climbing routes official travel portal of Perm Region Archived from the original on 2011 12 23 Franklin and Widdis p 44 Franklin and Widdis 44 45 Franklin and Widdis p 45 Ermak TV Mini Series 1996 IMDb Stites p 44 Longworth a b Manning pp 206 207 a b Armstrong p 14 Armstrong pp 14 15References editThis article incorporates text from the Great Soviet Encyclopedia Armstrong Terence E Yermak s Campaign in Siberia A Selection of Documents London Hakluyt Society 1975 Baikalov Anatole V The Conquest and Colonisation of Siberia The Slavonic and East European Review 10 no 30 1932 557 571 Bisher Jamie White Terror Cossack Warlords of the Trans Siberian London Frank Cass 2005 Cresson W P The Cossacks Their History and Country New York Brentano s 1919 Czaplicka Miss and Leslie Urquhart The Future of Siberia Discussion The Geographical Journal 51 no 3 1918 159 164 Feodoroff Nicholas V Soviet Communists and Russian History A Frame in Time Commack NY Nova Science 1997 Franklin Simon and Emma Widdis National Identity in Russian Culture An Introduction Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 Haywood A J Siberia A Cultural History Oxford Oxford University Press 2010 Howe Sonia E Some Russian Heroes Saints and Sinners Legendary and Historical London Williams and Norgate 1916 Kerner Robert Joseph The Russian Eastward Movement Some Observations on its Historical Significance Berkeley Pacific Historical Review 1948 Kivelson Valerie A Cartographies of Tsardom The Land and Its Meanings in Seventeenth Century Russia Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press 2006 Landers Brian Empires Apart A History of American and Russian Imperialism New York Pegasus Books 2010 Lincoln W Bruce The Conquest of a Continent Siberia and the Russians New York Random House 1994 Longworth Philip The Cossacks New York Holt Rinehart and Winston 1969 Manning Clarence Augustus Yermak Timofeyevich in Russian Folk Poetry Journal of the American Oriental Society 43 1923 206 215 https www jstor org stable 593339 accessed January 13 2012 March G Patrick Eastern Destiny Russia in Asia and the North Pacific Westport Conn Praeger 1996 Monument to the legendary Cossack Ermak Sights The Official Website of the City of Novocherkassk http www novochgrad ru en sights id 1873 html accessed January 14 2012 Naumov I V and David Norman Collins The History of Siberia London Routledge 2006 Perkhavko Valery Soft Gold Science in Russia 4 2008 50 56 Rasputin Valentin Siberia Siberia Evanston Ill Northwestern University Press 1996 Semyenov Yuri The Conquest of Siberia Ed E W Dickes London G Routledge amp Sons Ltd 1944 Stites Richard Russian Popular Culture Entertainment and Society Since 1900 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press 1992 Print Wright G Frederick Asiatic Russia New York McClure Phillips amp co 1902 Yermak 1996 IMDb The Internet Movie Database IMDb https www imdb com title tt0126894 accessed January 17 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yermak Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yermak Timofeyevich amp oldid 1219019879, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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