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The Voyage of Semen Dezhnev in 1648 (by Edited by Raymond H. Fisher)

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The Voyage of Semen Dezhnev in 1648
 

The Voyage of Semen Dezhnev in 1648
(by Edited by Raymond H. Fisher)

$25.00

ISBN: 0904180077

  • 1981 edition.  326 pages
  • Published by The Hakluyt Society, London
  • Hardcover with dust jacket.  Blue Boards,  Format C.
  • Very good condition.  Minor shelf wear to dust jacket.  Small owner stamp on free front end paper.

Bering's Precursor with selected documents.  Illustrated and Indexed.  Hakluyt Society Second Series, Volume 159.

In  1736 Gerhard Muller, a member of the new Russian Academy of Sciences, while gathering historical materials in Siberia, uncovered in Yakutsk reports briefly describing a voyage in 1648 from the Arctic river, Kolyma, around a great rocky promontory to a point south of the Pacific river, Anadyr.

The reports were those of Semen Dezhnev, leader of the expedition and one of its 26 survivors. They gave very few details about the voyage, but said enough to lead Muller to conclude that it demonstrated the separation of Asia and America, a matter insufficiently determined in 1728 by Vitus Bering.

Muller published an account of the voyage in 1758, and it aroused considerable interest, for it  answered the long-standing question of the geographical relation between Asia and America, and became a factor in the sending to the north Pacific of Captain Cook to look for a northwest or northeast passage between Europe and the Pacific.

Interest in the voyage declined after Cook's time and did not revive until the end of the next century when new material was discovered in the Russian archives.  That and the frontal attack in 1914 on the evidence for the voyage and Muller's conclusion from it by the American historian, Frank A. Golder, led in time, especially after World War II, to a more extensive examination of it by Soviet scholars and to the uncovering of new materials relating to it.

Unfortunately these materials add very few details about the voyage, but they do provide information about the setting and circumstances in which it took place, its antecedents and aftermath, and led to a more searching probing of the episode.

All of this justifies a drawing together and critical examination of the relevant documents and studies made of the voyage into a single and hopefully, balanced treatement of it and its participants, on the basis of which a judicious conclussion my be drawn as to its actuality and its significance.

That conclusion, which one is hard put to escape, is that the evidence supports Muller, not Golder.

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