Ethnic migrations in Alaska and the Aleutian Islands during the period of Russian America

Мұқаба

Дәйексөз келтіру

Толық мәтін

Ашық рұқсат Ашық рұқсат
Рұқсат жабық Рұқсат берілді
Рұқсат жабық Рұқсат ақылы немесе тек жазылушылар үшін

Аннотация

Ethnic migrations, that is the movement of a people or part of it to new territories outside traditional ethnic boundaries, play a significant role in history and can be very diverse. This can be easily verified by analyzing ethnic migrations in Russian America. This name was given to the former colonies of the Russian Empire that emerged in the Aleutian Islands and Alaska in the second half of the 18th century and were then sold to the United States in 1867. Ethnic migrations during this period can be reduced to three main types: 1) migrations of Russians and representatives of other peoples of the Russian Empire to the Aleutian Islands and Alaska; 2) migrations of local dependent natives under the influence of Russians; 3) migrations of independent native groups. The first two types of migrations were characterized by an organized and predominantly forced nature. Numerous historical data indicate that during the period of Russian America, both the scale and intensity of ethnic migrations increased compared to the pre-contact period. At the same time, the result of such migrations was very significant demographic losses for a number of ethnic groups, a change in traditional ethnic boundaries and the formation of new ethnic communities, as well as very important changes in the culture of a number of Alaskan peoples.

Толық мәтін

Рұқсат жабық

Авторлар туралы

Andrei Grinev

Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University

Хат алмасуға жауапты Автор.
Email: agrinev1960@mail.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0002-0246-7945

д.и.н., профессор кафедры общественных наук

Ресей, 29b Polytechnicheskaya Str., St. Petersburg, 195251

Әдебиет тізімі

  1. Arndt, K.L. 2013. Misplaced History: A Confrontation near Chignik Bay, Alaska, June-July 1782. Alaska Journal of Anthropology 11 (1–2): 9–16.
  2. Averkieva, Y.P. 1974. Indeitsy Severnoi Ameriki [Indians of North America]. Moscow: Nauka.
  3. Bergelson, M.B., and A.A. Kibrik. 2018. Russkii yazyk na beregakh zaliva Kuka: samoidentifikatsiia kul’tury v usloviiakh izoliatsii [Russian Language on the Shores of Cook Inlet: Self-Identification of Culture in Conditions of Isolation]. Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Filologiia 54: 29–41.
  4. Crawford, M.H., R.C. Rubicz, and M. Zlojutro. 2010. Origins of Aleuts and the Genetic Structure of Populations of the Archipelago: Molecular and Archaeological Perspectives. Human Biology 82 (5–6): 695–717.
  5. Fedorova, S.G. 1971. Russkoe naselenie Aliaski i Kalifornii, konets XVIII veka – 1867 g. [The Russian Population of Alaska and California, End of the 18th Century to 1867]. Moscow: Nauka.
  6. Fedorova, S.G. 1981. Russkoe nasledie v sud’bakh korennogo naseleniia Aliaski [Russian Heritage in the Fates of the Indigenous Population of Alaska]. In Traditsionnye kul’tury Severnoi Sibiri i Severnoi Ameriki [Traditional Cultures of Northern Siberia and North America], edited by I.S. Gurvich, 244–266. Moscow: Nauka.
  7. Filin, P.A. 2023. “Yukonskii voron”: ekspeditsiia po sledam Lavrentiia Zagoskina v Russkoi Amerike [“Yukon Raven”: An Expedition in the Footsteps of Lavrentii Zagoskin in Russian America]. Moscow: Institut Naslediia.
  8. Grinev, A.V. 1991. Indeitsy tlinkity v period Russkoi Ameriki (1741–1867 gg.) [The Tlingit Indians in Russian America, 1741–1867]. Novosibirsk: Nauka.
  9. Grinev, A.V. 2011. Spetsifika vertikal’noi sotsial’noi mobil’nosti kreol’skogo naseleniia Russkoi Ameriki [Peculiarities of Vertical Social Mobility of the Creole Population in Russian America]. Etnograficheskoe obozrenie 2: 74–89.
  10. Grinev, A.V. 2017. Cultural Borrowings of Russians from the Natives of Alaska in the 18th and 19th Centuries. International Journal of Cultural Studies 20 (4): 395–401.
  11. Grinev, A.V. 2018. Aliaska pod krylom dvuglavogo orla (rossiiskaia kolonizatsiia Novogo Sveta v kontekste otechestvennoi i mirovoi istorii) [Alaska under the Wing of a Two-Headed Eagle (Russian Colonization of the New World in the Context of Russian and World History)]. Moscow: Academia.
  12. Grinev, A.V. 2018. Deserters and Fugitives in Russian America. Arctic Anthropology 55 (2): 134–151.
  13. Istomin, A.A. 1998. Sovmestnye russko-amerikanskie promyslovye ekspeditsii v Kaliforniiu (1803–1812 gg.) [Joint Russian-American Hunting Expeditions in California (1803–1812)]. Voprosy istorii 8: 105–113.
  14. Kan, S.A. 1999. Memory Eternal: Tlingit Culture and Russian Orthodox Christianity through Two Centuries. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
  15. Krauss, M.E. 1981. Yazyki korennogo naseleniia Aliaski: proshloe, nastoiashchee i budushchee [Languages of the Native Population of Alaska: Past, Present, and Future]. In Traditsionnye kul’tury Severnoi Sibiri i Severnoi Ameriki [Traditional Cultures of Northern Siberia and North America], edited by I.S. Gurvich, 149–182. Moscow: Nauka.
  16. De Laguna, F. 1947. The Prehistory of Northern North America as Seen from the Yukon. Menasha: Society for American Archaeology.
  17. De Laguna, F. 1972. Under Mount Saint Elias: The History and Culture of the Yakutat Tlingit. Pt. 1, Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press.
  18. Liapunova, R.G. 1987. Aleuty. Ocherki etnicheskoi istorii [Aleuts: Essays on Ethnic History]. Leningrad: Nauka.
  19. McClellan, C. 1975. My Old People Say: An Ethnographic Survey of Southern Yukon Territory. Pt. 1–2. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada.
  20. Morrison, D. 1991. The Copper Inuit Soapstone Trade. Arctic 44 (3): 239–246.
  21. Oberg, K. 1973. The Social Economy and Social Life of the Tlingit Indians. Seattle: University of Washington Press.
  22. Olson, R.L. 1967. Social Structure and Social Life of the Tlingit in Alaska. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  23. Shishelov, N.S. 2017. Voina i mir sredi aborigenov zapoliar’ia Aliaski v dokontaktnyi i rannekontaktnyi period [War and Peace among the Aborigines of Arctic Alaska in the Pre-Contact and Early Contact Periods]. Rossiia v global’nom mire 10 (33): 48–59.
  24. Shubin, V.O. 1992. Istoriia poselenii Rossiisko-Amerikanskoi kompanii na Kuril’skikh ostrovakh [History of the Russian-American Company Settlements on the Kuril Islands]. Kraevedcheskii biulleten’ (Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk) 3: 12–64.
  25. Swanton, J.R. 1908. Social Conditions, Beliefs, and Linguistic Relationship of the Tlingit

Қосымша файлдар

Қосымша файлдар
Әрекет
1. JATS XML
2. Fig. 1. Aboriginal peoples of Alaska and the Aleutian Islands and their languages before the arrival of the Russians in the 18th century.

Жүктеу (1MB)

© Russian Academy of Sciences, 2025