Ayan, Russia Explained

En Name:Ayan
Ru Name:Аян
Coordinates:56.4583°N 138.1681°W
Map Label Position:bottom
Image Coa:Coats of Arms of Ayano-Maysky Raion.jpg
Federal Subject:Khabarovsk Krai
Adm District Jur:Ayano-Maysky District
Adm Ctr Of:Ayano-Maysky District
Inhabloc Cat:Rural locality
Inhabloc Type:Selo
Pop 2010Census:967

Ayan (Russian: Аян) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Ayano-Maysky District of Khabarovsk Krai, Russia, located on the shore of a well-protected bay of the Sea of Okhotsk, 1447km (899miles) from Khabarovsk and 631km (392miles) by sea from Nikolayevsk-on-Amur. Population:

History

Around 1840, a decision was made to move the Russian-American Company base from Okhotsk down the coast to Ayan, because Okhotsk stands on a river mouth protected by a sand bar and is subject to flooding while Ayan is on a circular bay on the south side of a peninsula and can be entered without waiting for a proper wind. The area was poor in fish and shipbuilding timber, but there was said to be a coal deposit nearby. A survey was done in 1840 and work started in 1843 under Vasily Zavoyko of the Russian-American Company. In 1845, an overland route was established to Yakutsk. Several expeditions went south from Ayan to explore the Amur region. In 1849, the naval center was again shifted to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky and Zavoyko became governor there.

American and Russian whaleships cruised for bowhead and gray whales off Ayan between 1854 and 1866.[1] [2] They also entered the port for repairs and supplies as well as for shelter from storms.[3] In September 1856, the ship Alexander Coffin (381 tons), Capt. Isaiah Purrington, of New Bedford, was condemned and sold at auction in Ayan.[4] [5] On 10 August, the vessel had run aground Makanrushi during a heavy fog. She was refloated and had to be jury-rigged to reach the port. All the crew and cargo were saved.[6] [7] [8]

During the Crimean War, Ayan was still an important harbor. The harbor was taken by the British fleet on July 9, 1855. Yet the harbor and the little village had been vacated prior to that by the inhabitants. The coast batteries had been destroyed by the Russians, the guns were buried. Ayan was not destroyed. The objective of the British fleet was to destroy all Russian ships they could find. Apart from a small steam tug there were none. The tug had been pulled on shore and was about to be buried at the time of the occupation. The British troops destroyed the tug through an explosion.[9]

With the Amur Annexation in 1860, forces were shifted south to Nikolayevsk-on-Amur and Vladivostok. The Alaska Purchase in 1867 and the end of the Russian-American company further reduced Ayan's importance. Many leading experts of diverse professions joined the exodus of merchants that had discontinued commercial traffic resulting from the trade in the region.

The Yakutsk-Ayan Track supplied Ayan from Yakutsk from 1844 to 1867. It had three sections, first a 235-255 mile road southeast from Yakutsk, crossing the Amga River at Amginsk to Ust-Maya where the Maya River joins the Aldan, then about south up the Maya to near its southernmost point at Nelkan, and then a 150miles horse trail over the Dzhugdzhur Mountains to Ayan. Because the Maya flows north, it took thirteen to twenty-three days to go north and thirty to forty days to go south. In 1845, the Russian-American Company established ferries and 23 families of settlers, and in 1852, the government spent 20,000 rubles rebuilding the route and settled 211 persons.

In the last decades of the 19th century and in the beginning of the 20th century, assistance amounted to a few steamships a year dispatched from Vladivostok that brought flour, sugar, and household supplies. The remoteness of Ayan resulted in its steady depopulation.

In 1922, Ayan was one of the centers of the Yakut Revolt against Lenin's government. The Red Army besieged Anatoly Pepelyayev's forces in Ayan in June 1923. The fall of Ayan on June 16 marked the end of the Russian Civil War. Ayan served as the administrative center of the Okhotsk-Even National Okrug until 1934.

Transportation

Ayan is served by the Munuk Airport.

Climate

Ayan has a subarctic climate (Köppen Dwc) with severe winters only marginally moderated by its maritime location and mild, wet summers. Its maritime location and favourable aspect for moist summer winds makes the coast around Ayan extremely wet for a subarctic climate and much wetter than interior Siberia, with an average annual rainfall more than four times that of Yakutsk and two-and-a-half times that of Chita.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Omega, of Nantucket, July 19–24, 1854, Martha's Vineyard Museum (MVM); Sea Breeze, of New Bedford, Sep. 19, 1866, Old Dartmouth Historical Society.
  2. Turku, of Turku, 1854; Storfursten Constantin, of Helsinki, 1858-1860. In Lindholm, O. V., Haes, T. A., & Tyrtoff, D. N. (2008). Beyond the frontiers of imperial Russia: From the memoirs of Otto W. Lindholm. Javea, Spain: A. de Haes OWL Publishing.
  3. Daniel Wood, New Bedford, June 1857, Nicholson Whaling Collection (NWC); Josephine, of New Bedford, Oct. 4-11, 1861, Kendall Whaling Museum (KWM); Cicero, of New Bedford, Sept. 30-Oct. 2, 1863, KWM.
  4. Frances Henrietta, of New Bedford, Sept. 9, 1856, NWC.
  5. Book: Starbuck, Alexander . History of the American Whale Fishery from Its Earliest Inception to the year 1876 . 1878 . Castle . 1-55521-537-8 .
  6. Whalemen's Shipping List and Merchants' Transcript (Vol. XIV, No. 41, Dec. 16, 1856, New Bedford).
  7. Whalemen's Shipping List and Merchants' Transcript (Vol. XIV, No. 42, Dec. 23, 1856, New Bedford).
  8. The Friend (Vol. V, No. 12, Dec. 11, 1856, p. 93, Honolulu).
  9. Important from the Russian Possessions - Operations of the Allied Fleet in the North Pacific. The New York Times, November 12, 1855.