Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q380386> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 50 of
50
with 100 triples per page.
- Q380386 subject Q16808143.
- Q380386 subject Q6311193.
- Q380386 subject Q6311195.
- Q380386 subject Q6644359.
- Q380386 subject Q6760870.
- Q380386 subject Q7776528.
- Q380386 subject Q7909487.
- Q380386 subject Q8543261.
- Q380386 subject Q8690344.
- Q380386 subject Q8690977.
- Q380386 subject Q8691962.
- Q380386 abstract "Vladimir Vasilyevich Atlasov or Otlasov (Russian: Влади́мир Васи́льевич Атла́сов or Отла́сов) (born in Veliky Ustyug between 1661 and 1664—died in 1711) was a Siberian Cossack who was the first Russian to organize systematic exploration of the Kamchatka Peninsula. Atlasov Island, an uninhabited volcanic island off the southern tip of Kamchatka, is named after him.He is first heard of around 1682 collecting Yasak on the Aldan River and one of the Uda Rivers. In 1695 the voyevoda of Yakutsk appointed him prikazshchik of Anadyrsk. The Russians here had heard reports of a 'Kamchatka River' to the south and were already collecting yasak on the headwaters of the rivers that flow south toward Kamchatka. At least one of them had followed the Penzhina River to the Sea of Okhotsk. In 1696 he sent Luka Morozko south to explore. Morozko got as far south as the Tegil River on the west side of the peninsula and returned with some 'mysterious writings', apparently from a wrecked Japanese ship. In 1697 Atlasov set off south with 65 serving-men and 60 Yukaghirs. Travelling on reindeer, they reached the mouth of the Penzhina River. He went down the west coast for two weeks and then crossed to the east coast. (Lantzeff has this as February 1697 on the Olyutorsky Gulf, but the Russian wiki has him leaving in the spring of 1697 and the Olyutorsky Gulf is rather far to the northeast). He left Morzoko to explore the east side and returned to the west side, but Morozko had to be recalled to deal with a Yukaghir mutiny (at the Palana River). Going south to the Tegil River, he heard reports of the Kamchatka River and recrossed the Central Range to the Kamchatka where he met the Itelmens for the first time. He made an alliance with one clan and went downriver and burned a village of their enemies. Returning, he learned that some Koryaks had stolen his reindeer. He chased them, killed about 150 and retrieved his reindeer. Continuing down the west side he reached the Icha River where he rescued or captured a Japanese sailor who had been shipwrecked. Further south he reached the Golygina River area, from which he was able to see Atlasov Island. Here he met the first Ainu and managed to kill fifty of them. Returning north to the Icha, he sent a party of men over the mountains to build an ostrog at Verkhnekamchatsk on the upper Kamchatka. Here he decided to return to Anadyrsk, either under pressure of his men or because he was running short of gunpowder and lead.He reached Anadyrsk in July 1699 and wrote a report. He was in Yakutsk in June 1700 and in February 1701 he reached Moscow where he presented his report. He was promoted to Golova and sent back to administer Kamchatka. On the Angara River in 1701 he met and plundered a merchant's boat loaded with Chinese goods. For this he and his men were thrown in jail. Kamchatka became increasingly disorderly and in 1707 Atlasov was released and sent to Kamchatka to restore order. On the journey his methods were so rough that most of his men sent a letter of protest to Yakutsk. He pacified the natives to some degree, but in December 1707 his own cossacks revolted and imprisoned him. He escaped (from Verkhnekamchatsk) and went downriver to Nizhnekamchatsk, but the local commander refused to step aside and give him command. What he did for the next four years is uncertain. In January 1711 he was murdered in his sleep by another band of mutineers.".
- Q380386 thumbnail Vladimir_Atlasov.jpg?width=300.
- Q380386 wikiPageExternalLink atlasov.htm.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q101828.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q1074905.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q111048.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q1115562.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q1147405.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q162737.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q16808143.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q1789899.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q191832.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q1961204.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q1994778.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q1995643.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q2531742.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q275102.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q4106561.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q4142674.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q6311193.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q6311195.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q6644359.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q6760870.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q720386.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q735349.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q757314.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q7776528.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q786805.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q7909487.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q8543261.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q8690344.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q8690977.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q8691962.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q90668.
- Q380386 wikiPageWikiLink Q993.
- Q380386 type Thing.
- Q380386 comment "Vladimir Vasilyevich Atlasov or Otlasov (Russian: Влади́мир Васи́льевич Атла́сов or Отла́сов) (born in Veliky Ustyug between 1661 and 1664—died in 1711) was a Siberian Cossack who was the first Russian to organize systematic exploration of the Kamchatka Peninsula. Atlasov Island, an uninhabited volcanic island off the southern tip of Kamchatka, is named after him.He is first heard of around 1682 collecting Yasak on the Aldan River and one of the Uda Rivers.".
- Q380386 label "Vladimir Atlasov".
- Q380386 depiction Vladimir_Atlasov.jpg.