Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2017
Russian Eastward expansion, which played a major role in shaping the destinies of the Russian people and in creating the largest contiguous land empire in the world, began at the dawn of Russian history. The great Asiatic expansion of the Muscovite period which brought the Russians to the shore of the Pacific Ocean was preceded by centuries of eastward advance in European Russia. In the beginning of Russian history, two Russian principalities, Novgorod and Rostov-Suzdal, were engaged in exploring, conquering, exploiting, and colonizing the area west of the Ural Mountains. A study of their colonial activities not only furnishes some of the background of later spectacular Asiatic expansion, but also throws light on the relations between these two early states within the framework of medieval Russia.
The Novgorodian colonial expansion was directed toward the northeastern corner of European Russia, into the vast region stretching from Lake Onega to the Ural Mountains and from the northern tributaries of the Volga to the Arctic Ocean. Among the Russians, the Novgorodians were the first to penetrate this region. Anxious to obtain commodities which they could use in their trade with Western Europe, they were aided in their quest by the northern system of rivers and portages.
Based on a paper read at the meeting of the Pacific Coast branch of the American Historical Association at Claremont, California, January 4, 1947.
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6 P.S.R.L., I, 107; M.D. Priselkov, in his Istoriia russkago letopisaniia (Leningrad, 1940), p. 44, suggests that the story was inserted into the chronicle in 1118.
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11 The charter mentions the amount of salt to be delivered to the bishop from the seacoast. The Novgorodian salt works were situated near the mouth of the Northern Dvina. Karamzin, op. cit., II, 156, notes. ,
12 Quoted by Ogorodnikov, op. cit., p. 107.
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20 P.S.R.L., II, 39.
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22 P.S.R.L., II, 88.
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30 Ibid., III, 19,23,31.
31 Presniakov, op. cit., pp. 37–38.
32 P.S.R.L., III, 19, esp. note (a)v; IV, 17.
33 Ibid., III, 169–170. Ilovaiskii, op. cit., Vol. I, Part II, pp. 196–197.
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36 Ibid., III, 23.
37 Ibid., I, 211–215.
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39 A frontier town, on the junction of the Sukhona and Yug, forming jointly the Northern Dvina, of doubtful origin but generally, during the struggle between Novgorod and Rostov-Suzdal, leaning toward the latter and accepting the ecclesiastic jurisdiction of Rostov bishops.
40 P.S.R.L., I, 215; IV, 26; V, 172; VII, 126.
41 Ibid., VII, 126–127.
42 Ibid., VII, 128.
43 In its subsequent history Nizhnii Novgorod justified these expectations and even superseded Novgorod the Great.
44 P.S.R.L., III, 133–135; VII, 138.