Yeniseysk Governorate Explained

Conventional Long Name:Yeniseysk Governorate
Common Name:Krasnoyarsk
Subdivision:Governorate
Nation:the Russian Empire (1822–1917), Russian Republic and RSFSR (1917–1925)
Capital:Krasnoyarsk
Year Start:1822
Year End:1925
Image Map Caption:Yeniseysk Governorate within the Russian Empire
Image Map2:1856. Card from set of geographical cards of the Russian Empire 046.jpg
P1:Tomsk Governorate
S1:Siberian Krai
Stat Year2:1897[1]
Stat Area1:2,516,930
Stat Pop2:570,161
Today:Russia

Yeniseysk Governorate (Russian: Енисе́йская губе́рния|Yeniseyskaya guberniya)[2] [3] [4] [5] [6] was an administrative-territorial unit (guberniya) of the Russian Empire, the Russian Republic, and the Russian SFSR in 1822–1925. It was named after Yeniseysk.

General information

In 1724 the Yeniseysk Province based on Yeniseysk was established within the Siberian Governorate, disestablished in 1775. Its extents approximately corresponded to the future Yeniseysk Governorate.

The Governorate was established on January 26 (February 7), 1822 when the territory of Siberia General Governorate was divided into two governorates general: West-Siberian and East-Siberian according to the decree of Alexander I "On the division of Siberia into two general governments" [7] [8] of the administrative reform under the project of Mikhail Speransky.

On July 22 (August 3), 1822, the Yeniseysk Governorate [9] with the administrative center of Krasnoyarsk[10] was separated from the Tomsk Governorate to become a part of East-Siberian Governorate General.[11]

The Yeniseysk Governorate were located in the western part of Eastern Siberia between 52° 20' and 77° 33' north latitude and 95° and 128° east longitude. It stretched from the southern to the northern limits of the Russian Empire. The area looked like an irregular polygon, elongated in the direction from the southwest to the northeast. The greatest length of the Yeniseysk Governorate from China to the extreme northern tip of Asia (a cape in the east of the Taymyr Peninsula) is 2800 verst, the greatest width from west to east is up to 1300 verst. In the north, the Yeniseysk Governorate was bounded by the Northern Ocean, In the northeast by the Vilyuysk okrug of the Yakutsk Oblast, in the east and southeast by the Kirensky Uyezd and Nizhneudinsky Uyezd of the Irkutsk Governorate; in south by China. In the west, Yeniseysk Governorate bordered on West Siberian General Governorate. In the southwest and west with the Kuznetskiy Okrug, Marinsky Uezd and Narymsky of the Tomsk Governorate, from the northwest with the Beryozovsky Uezd of the Tobolsk Governorate.[12]

The area of the Yeniseysk Governorate was 2,211,589 square verst (the second largest province, after the Yakutsk Oblast).

Coat of arms of the Yeniseysk Governorate

“In a scarlet shield, a golden lion with azure eyes and tongue, and black claws, holding the same sickle in its right paw. The shield is surmounted by the imperial crown and surrounded by golden oak leaves connected by St. Andrew's ribbon.The coat of arms of the Yenisei Governorate was approved on July 5, 1878 by the All-Russian Emperor Alexander II. In 1886, decorations were removed from the city shields by the armorial department under the Department of Heraldry.The lion symbolized strength and courage, and the sickle and shovel reflected the main occupation of the inhabitants - agriculture and mining, primarily gold.

History

[13] [14] [15]

17th century

Until 1629, the territory of the modern Krasnoyarsk Krai was part of a vast region with the center in the city of Tobolsk. Later, the ostrog (fortress) of Yeniseisk, Krasnoyarsk and Kansk with adjacent lands were assigned to the Tomsk razryad.

In 1676, the Yeniseisk ostrog received the status of a city, under which all the settlements along the Yenisei river and the right-bank territories stretching to Transbaikal were transferred.

18th century

Peter I in 1708 carried out territorial and administrative transformations to streamline the administration of the state. The main administrative unit of the Russian Empire was the Governorate, which included provinces, divided into uezds. According to the Decree of December 18, 1708, the entire territory of the Russian Empire was divided into eight provinces. Siberia and part of the Urals became part of the Siberia Governorate with the center in the city of Tobolsk.

Due to the long distances, the lack of means of communication, the administration of the territories of the Siberia Governorate was extremely difficult. There was a need for territorial transformations. In 1719, three provinces were established as part of the Siberia Governorate: Vyatka, Solikamsk and Tobolsk, and five years later two more - Irkutsk Governorate and Yeniseisk Governorate with a center in the city of Yeniseisk. The Yeniseisk Governorate included the following uezds (listed as towns): Mangazeya, Yeniseysk, Krasny Yar, Tomskoy, Kuznetskoy, Narym and Ketsk.

In 1764, by decree of Catherine II, the territory of Siberia was subjected to another administrative-territorial reform: a second Governorate was established - Irkutsk Governorate, which included the Yeniseisk Governorate. Two decades later, the Yeniseisk Governorate was liquidated, its uezds were included in three Governorate: Tobolsk (Yeniseisk and Achinsk), Irkutsk and Kolyvan (Krasnoyarsk).

In 1797, all the territories of the Yenisei River basin were assigned to the Tobolsk Governorate (until 1804; then, until 1822, they were part of the Tomsk Governorate).

19th century

In order to centralize management in 1803, the Siberian General Governorate was created with the center in the city of Irkutsk, which absorbed the territories of Tobolsk Governorate, Irkutsk Governorate and Tomsk Governorate.

In 1822, this system of territorial subordination was abolished, and the West Siberian General Governorate (center Tobolsk) and East Siberian General Governorate (center Irkutsk) were created instead. The Siberian people belonged to the inorodtsy class and their nomadic status was confirmed by a special system of self-government "steppe duma - foreign government - tribal government", in accordance with the "Charter on the management of foreigners".[16]

At the same time, at the suggestion of M. M. Speransky, who was conducting an audit of the Siberian possessions, Emperor Alexander I signed a decree on the formation of the Yeniseysk Governorate as part of five districts: Krasnoyarsk, Yeniseisk (with Turukhansk Territory), Achinsk, Minusinsk and Kansk. The city of Krasnoyarsk was approved as the administrative center of the newly formed province.

On February 26, 1831, the Senate issued a decree "On the organization of the post office in the Yeniseysk Governorate". A provincial post office was established in Krasnoyarsk, postal expeditions were established in Yeniseisk and Achinsk, and post offices were opened in Kansk, Minusinsk and Turukhansk.

For 50 years after the creation of the Yeniseysk Governorate, minor changes took place in the administrative structure of the Russian Empire: in 1879, the okrug (districts) were renamed uezd (counties). The territory of the Yeniseysk Governorate did not undergo any changes and basically coincided with the borders of the modern Krasnoyarsk Krai.In 1886, the Usinsky border okrug (Usinsky Krai) was separated from Minusinsk Uyezd.[17] [18]

In 1882 Ob-Yenisei channel construction started and opened for navigation of small ships in 1891.[19]

In 1892 Charles Vapereau made a journey from Beijing to Paris through Siberia published about his travel in journal with drawings and engravings from his photos.[20] [21]

20th century [22] [23] [24]

Since 1913, the Yeniseysk Governorate had been part of the Irkutsk Governor General.

In the summer of 1913, Fridtjof Nansen travelled to the Kara Sea, by the invitation of Jonas Lied, as part of a delegation: Vostrotin Stepan Vasilyevich (Siberian public figure, polar explorer, politician and diplomat), Iosif Grigorievich Loris-Melikov (secretary of the Russian mission in Norway), etc, investigating a possible Northern Sea trade Route[25] between Western Europe and the Siberian interior.[26] The party then took the barge «Turukhansk» up the Yenisei River to Krasnoyarsk, and then through China along the Chinese Eastern Railway reached Vladivostok, on the way stopped in Khabarovsk, where he met a famous Russian traveler, explorer of the Ussuri region, Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Arseniev, from where he returned by cars, horses and at that time the unfinished northern route of the Trans-Siberian Railway to Norway through Yekaterinburg, where he participated in a meeting of the Russian Geographical Society, reporting on the voyage along the Yenisei. Nansen published a report from thу journey in book Through Siberia [27] .

In 1913 the Usinsk border okrug was transformed into the Usinsk-Uriankhai Krai.

On April 17, 1914, the Russian government establishes a protectorate over Uryankhay Krai (conforming roughly to the territory of modern Tuva), which became part of the Yeniseysk Governorate.

In the summer 1914 Norwegian expedition (Henrik Printz, botanist, Orjan Olsen, ornithologist, Anders Olsen, Fritz Jensen, zoological assistant, photographer, and Josif Ermilowitsch Gutschin assistant with archaeological and anthropological collections local Russian from Minusinsk) was exploring  southern  Siberia  and  north-western  Mongolia "the  so-called  Urjankai  country,  a  tract  of  land  about  the  sources  of  the  Yenisei,  as yet  almost  entirely  unknown" "terra incognita" as it was described in resulting books "The vegetation of the Siberian-Mongolian frontiers: (the Sayansk region)" [28] and "To Jenisei's sources. The Norwegian Sibirie Expedition's journey".[29]

In 1914, an ethnographic expedition from the museums of Oxford and Pennsylvania made a trip along the Yenisei, consisting of anthropologist Maria Czaplicka, anthropologist Henry Usher Hall, ornithologist Maud Doria Haviland, Dora Curtis painter, Vasily Korobeinikov. The researchers traveled overland to Krasnoyarsk, along the Trans-Siberian Railway and on the "Oryol" steamer climbed the Yenisei to the mouth of the Golchikha, where they spent the summer studying the nature and beliefs of the indigenous peoples of Siberia.[30] [31] [32]

A similar administrative-territorial division persisted until the early 1920s.

Uryankhay Krai existed until August 14, 1921, when local revolutionaries, supported by the Red Army of the RSFSR, decided to proclaim the national sovereignty of Tuvan People's Republic. Apart from Mongolia, however, no other country recognized its independence.

Since 1923, work began on the zoning of Siberia, which marked the beginning of the administrative reorganization of the territory of the region. Volosts were abolished, enlarged uezds (districts) were created.

On November 14, 1923, parts of the Yeniseysk governorate's Minusinsky and Achinsky Uezds were merged with one volost of Kuznetskiy Uyezd of Tomsk Governorate to form new Khakassky Uezd. On March 19, 1924, Siberian Revolutionary Committee (Sibrevkom) approved the enlargement of the Yeniseysk governorate's uezds (districts).

The Usinsk okrug was formed in 1924 as part of the Yeniseisk Governorate, but already in 1925 it became part of the Minusinsk okrug of the Siberian Krai,

On June 23, 1924, new Turukhansky Uezd was formed in the governorate. Its Yuzhnaya Volost was formed on the part of the territory of Antsiferovskaya Volost of Yeniseysky Uezd. After that, Yeniseysky Uezd itself was abolished and its remaining territory split between Kansky and Krasnoyarsky Uezds. At the same time, Daurskaya Volost of Achinsky Uezd was transferred to Krasnoyarsky Uezd.

Also in 1924, parts of Znamenskaya and Tashtypskaya Volosts of Minusinsky Uezd were transferred to Khakassky Uezd. The former territory became a part of Charkovskaya Enlarged Volost, while the latter was merged into Tashtypskaya Enlarged Volost.

On May 25, 1925, all Governorates (including Yeniseysk Governorate) and regions in Siberia are abolished by the decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee, their territories are merged into a single Siberian Krai, with the center in Novosibirsk, along with the territories of Oyrat Autonomous Oblast and Altai, Novo-Nikolayevsk, Omsk, and Tomsk Governorates. Achinsky, Kansky, Krasnoyarsky, Minusinsky, and Khakassky Uezds of the governorate were at the same time transformed into okrugs, while Turukhansky Uezd was renamed Turukhansky Krai and transferred to Krasnoyarsk Okrug.

Administrative division

As of its foundation, the governorate included five okrugs (districts) from former uezd (counties):[33]

The administrative-territorial division of the Yenisei province remained basically unchanged until 1924. Only the volost division changed.

The number of volosts in the province is 35. Turukhansky Krai is divided into 3 sections, the same volosts.

Since 1898, the okrugs (districts) of the Yenisei Governorate were again called uezd (counties).

At the end of the 19th century, the Yeniseysk Governorate included 5 uezds (since 1898 - okrugs) and the Turukhansky Krai.

Uezd (Okrugs)CenterUezd towncoat of armsArea, verstPopulation(1897),[34] peopleVolosts [35] [36]
1Achinsk (6,699 people)51,071.0111,466Balakhtinskaya, Nazarovskaya, Pokrovskaya, Meletskaya Inorodskaya Council, Kyzylskaya Steppe Duma, Uzhurskaya volost
2YeniseyskYeniseysk (11,506 people)384,303.767,536Anuiferovskaya, Belskaya, Kazachinskaya, Kezhemskaya, Maklakovskaya, Pinchugskaya, Yalanskaya
3KanskyKansk (7,537 people)70,962.796,202Antsirskaya, Irbeyskaya, Rybinskaya, Taseevskaya, Tinskaya, Ustyanskaya, Urinskaya, Shelaevsky society
4KrasnoyarskKrasnoyarsk (26,699 people)19,024.099,156Voznesenskaya, Botoiskaya, Zaledeevskaya, Elovskaya, Nakhvalskaya, Pogorelskaya, Sukhobuzimskaya, Chastostrovskaya
5MinusinskyMinusinsk (10,231 people)79,571.9182,733Abakanskaya, Abakanskaya foreign council, Askyzskaya steppe duma, Beyskaya volost, Ermakovskaya volost, Idrinskaya, Kuraginskaya, Novoselovskaya, Sagayskaya, Tesinskaya, Shushenskaya, Usinsky border okrug
6Turukhansky KraiTurukhansk (212 people)1609,824.210,9593 sections

Population

In the 1760s-1780s, exile to Siberia became widespread. In the 1820s, the exiles constituted the second largest group of residents of Minusinsk. In 1863, 44,994 exiles lived in the Yeniseisk Governorate, which was 1/7 of the entire population of the province.

In the second half of the 19th-early 20th centuries, the formation of the population of the Yeniseisk Governorate occurred as a result of both ongoing spontaneous and organized migration processes.[37] [38] According to the results of the General Census of 1897, the Russian-speaking population, consisting of Siberians - the Starozhily (Russian: старожилы, lit.'Old-Timers, Old-Settlers') and later settlers[39] "Raseyskie", prevailed, and the bulk of the inorodtsy population,[40] consisting of indigenous peoples of Siberia.[41] [42]

According to the 1897 census, 570.2 thousand people lived in the province, including 62.9 thousand people in cities (11.7%). The religious composition was dominated by Orthodox - 93.8%, there were also Old Believers - 2.1%, Catholics - 1.1%, Jews - 1.1%, Muslims - 0.8% Lutherans - 0.7%.

Literate - 13.7%.

The estimated population in 1906 was almost entirely Russian, the rest (about 10%) consisting of Samoyedes, Tatars, Tunguses, Yakuts, Mongols and Ostyaks.[5]

Fun facts

In the 19th century, the inhabitants of the coastal villages between Yeniseisk and Krasnoyarsk had the custom to call out to all ships and rafts passing by. The call was made in a singsong voice, in a drawling voice: “and who is swimming, and who is swimming, and who is swimming by name?”. Sailors had to respond and report their name or shout "good people." If they did not do this, residents immediately sailed from the shores in boats, inspected the ships, asking if there was anything “unallowed” [43]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Первая всеобщая перепись населения Российской Империи 1897 г. . The first general census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897 . Demoscope Weekly . ru.
  2. Web site: ЕНИСЕЙСКАЯ ГУБЕРНИЯ • Большая российская энциклопедия - электронная версия . YENISEYSK GOVERNORATE • Great Russian encyclopedia - electronic version . 2022-09-07 . bigenc.ru.
  3. Web site: Latkin . Nikolai Vasilievich . ЭСБЕ/Енисейская губерния — Викитека . ESBE/Yenisei Governorate - Wikisource . 2022-09-07 . ru.wikisource.org . ru.
  4. Book: Latkin, N.V. . Енисейская губерния, ее прошлое и настоящее . 1892 . Рипол Классик . 978-5-4241-8307-2 . ru . Yenisei province, its past and present.
  5. Yeniseisk (government) . 28 . Kropotkin . Peter Alexeivitch . Peter Kropotkin. Bealby . John Thomas. 914 - 915 . 1.
  6. Web site: Makarenko . A. A. . 1913 . ГПИБ Макаренко А. А. Сибирский народный календарь в этнографическом отношении : Восточная Сибирь. Енисейская губерния. - СПб., 1913. - (Записки имп. рус. геогр. о-ва по отд-нию этнографии; т. XXXVI). . GPIB Siberian folk calendar in ethnographic terms: Eastern Siberia. Yenisei province. (Notes of the Imperial Russian geographic island in the department of ethnography; vol. XXXVI). . 2022-09-13 . elib.shpl.ru . St. Petersburg.
  7. Web site: Полное собрание законов Российской империи. Собрание (1649 - 1825) : Том 38 (1822 - 1823). Закон 28.892. О разделении Сибирских Губерний на Западное и Восточное управления . Complete collection of laws of the Russian Empire. Collection (1649 - 1825): Volume 38 (1822 - 1823). Law 28.892. On the division of the Siberian provinces into Western and Eastern administrations . 2022-09-07 . nlr.ru . 37.
  8. Web site: Полное собрание законов Российской Империи. Собрание Первое. Том XXXVIII. 28.892. О разделении Сибирских Губерний на Западное и Восточное управления. . Complete collection of laws of the Russian Empire. Assembly First. Volume XXXVIII. 28.892. On the division of the Siberian provinces into Western and Eastern administrations. . 2022-09-07 . runivers.ru . 37 . Ru.
  9. Book: Steller, Georg Wilhelm . Eastbound through Siberia: Observations from the Great Northern Expedition . 2020-05-05 . Indiana University Press . 978-0-253-04784-7 . 46 . en.
  10. Book: Haywood, Anthony . Siberia: A Cultural History . 2012-05-02 . Andrews UK Limited . 978-1-908493-36-1 . en.
  11. Д.н . Гергилев . 2017 . Структура губернского и областного управления в Восточной Сибири в 1822–1917 гг.: принципы функционирования и региональные особенности . Genesis: исторические исследования . 6 . 56–69 . 10.25136/2409-868X.2017.6.22903 . 2409-868X. free .
  12. Web site: Maak . Richard . 1864 . ГПИБ [Вып.] 51 : Енисейская губерния. ]. Lists of populated areas of the Russian Empire, compiled and published by the Central Statistical Committee of the Ministry of Internal Affairs: Yenisei province . 2022-09-07 . elib.shpl.ru . Center. stat. com. Min. internal Affairs . St. Petersburg.
  13. Web site: Енисейские губернские ведомости . Yeniseisk Governorate Gazette . 2022-09-08 . www.lib.tsu.ru.
  14. Book: Chudnovsky, Solomon Lazarevich . Енисейская губерния . ru . Yenisei province.
  15. Book: Krivoshapkin, Mikhail Fomich . Енисейский округ и его жизнь . ru . Yenisei district and its life . St. Petersburg . Publishing house of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society, under the auspices of V. A. Kokorev.
  16. Mamysheva . E.P. . 2018 . Переселенцы и инородческое население в Енисейской губернии во второй половине XIX – начале XX вв. (на материалах Минусинского и Ачинского округов): проблема взаимоотношений . Settlers and non-native population in the Yeniseisk Governorate in the second half of the 19th - early 20th centuries. (on the materials of the Minusinsk and Achinsk Okrug): the problem of relationships . Genesis: исторические исследования . 11 . 101–107 . 10.25136/2409-868X.2018.11.28138 . 91261773 . 2409-868X. free .
  17. Web site: Latkin . N.V. . 1902 . ЭСБЕ/Усинский пограничный округ — Викитека . ESBE/Usinsky Border District - Wikisource . 2022-09-09 . ru.wikisource.org . ru.
  18. Web site: МЭСБЕ/Усинский пограничный округ — Викитека . MESBE / Usinsky border okrug - Wikisource . 2022-09-09 . ru.wikisource.org . ru.
  19. Web site: Latkin . Nikolay Vasilievich . ЭСБЕ/Обско-Енисейский канал — Викитека . ESBE/Ob-Yenisei Canal - Wikisource . 2022-09-23 . ru.wikisource.org . ru.
  20. Web site: De Pékin à Paris : la Corée, l'Amour et la Sibérie/Texte entier - Wikisource . 2022-09-23 . fr.wikisource.org . fr.
  21. Vapereau . Charles . 1894 . "De Pékin à Paris : la Corée, l'Amour et la Sibérie" . Le Tour du Monde. . 67-68 .
  22. Web site: Енисейский край . YENISEISK KRAI. Krasnoyarsk, Yenisei Governorate, 1906. . 2022-09-08 . www.lib.tsu.ru.
  23. Web site: 1916–1917 . Енисейский край. Ежедневная, внепартийная-прогрессивная, экономико-политическая и литературная газета . Yeniseisk Krai: daily, non-party-progressive, economic, political and literary newspaper. - Krasnoyarsk. . 2022-09-08 . www.lib.tsu.ru.
  24. Web site: Енисейское слово . Yeniseisk word. - Krasnoyarsk, 1906. . 2022-09-08 . www.lib.tsu.ru.
  25. Web site: ГПИБ Островских П. Е. Север Енисейской губернии в его прошлом и настоящем : (доклад П. Е. Островских в Российском морском союзе 26 мая 1908 г.). - [СПб.], 1909. - (Труды Российского морского союза ; Вып. 3). ]. GPIB Ostrovskikh P.E. The North of the Yenisei province in its past and present: (report by P.E. Ostrovskikh in the Russian Maritime Union on May 26, 1908). (Proceedings of the Russian Maritime Union; Issue 3). . 2022-09-13 . elib.shpl.ru . St. Petersburg . 1909.
  26. Komleva . Evgeniya . Zinoviev . Vasiliy . Zhuravel' . Olga . 2015 . "Энциклопедический словарь по истории купечества и коммерции Сибири": возвращенные имена и раскрытые судьбы . "Encyclopedic Dictionary of the History of the Merchants and Commerce of Siberia": returned names and revealed destinies . Quaestio Rossica . ru . 2 . 250–266–250–266 . 10.15826/qr.2015.2.106 . 2313-6871. free .
  27. Book: Nansen, Fridtjof . Through Siberia, the land of the future . 1914 . London, W. Heinemann . Cornell University Library.
  28. Book: Printz, Henrik . The vegetation of the Siberian-Mongolian frontiers (the Sayansk region) . 1921 . [Trondhjem] K. Norske Videnskabers Selskab . Cornell University Library.
  29. Book: Olsen, Orjan Mikael . Til Jeneseis kilder; den Norske Sibirieskspeditions reise, 1914 . 1915 . Kristiania J.W. Cappelen . Robarts - University of Toronto.
  30. Book: Haviland, Maud D. (Maud Doria) . A summer on the Yenesei (1914) . 1915 . London : E. Arnold . University of California Libraries.
  31. Maizik . Elena I . Vdovin . Alexandr S. . 2018 . Освоение Сибири: Енисейская (Оксфордская) экспедиция 1914–1915 гг. . The Development of Siberia: the Yenisei (Oxford) Expedition of 1914–1915 . Journal of Siberian Federal University. Humanities & Social Sciences. . ru.
  32. Klitsenko . Yuri . 2014-01-01 . Один год в Сибири: к 100-летию енисейской экспедиции Марии Чаплицкой . One year in Siberia: to the 100th anniversary of the Yenisei expedition of Maria Czaplicka . газета "Илкэн".
  33. Book: Pestov, Ivan Semyonovich . Записки об Енисейской губернии Восточной Сибири, 1831 года . ru . Notes on the Yeniseisk Governorate of Eastern-Siberia, 1831.
  34. Web site: Первая Всеобщая перепись населения населения Российской империи 1897 года.(Губернские итоги). Т.Т.1-89. СПб.: 1903-1905 . The first General census of the population of the Russian Empire in 1897. (Governorate data). T.T.1-89. St. Petersburg: 1903-1905 . 2022-09-08 . www.demoscope.ru.
  35. Web site: Zenchenko . T. V. . 1912 . ГПИБ Зенченко Т. В. Енисейская губерния. - Полтава . GPIB Yenisei province. . 2022-09-12 . elib.shpl.ru . Poltava.
  36. Web site: 1914 . ГПИБ Енисейская губерния : краткое описание Енисейской губернии для переселенцев и ходоков. . GPIB Yenisei province: a brief description of the Yenisei province for immigrants and walkers. . 2022-09-12 . elib.shpl.ru . Krasnoyarsk . InfoRost.
  37. Web site: 1890–1916 . ГПИБ: Движение населения в Европейской России. Статистические таблицы ... [по годам]. - СПб., 1890-1916. - (Статистика Российской империи). ]. GPIB: Population movement in European Russia. Statistical tables ... [by years]. . 2022-09-13 . elib.shpl.ru . St. Petersburg.
  38. Web site: 1871–1916 . ГПИБ Обзор Енисейской губернии ... [по годам]. - Красноярск, 1871-1916. ]. GPIB Overview of the Yenisei province ... [by years]. . 2022-09-13 . elib.shpl.ru . Krasnoyarsk.
  39. Book: Spravochnai͡a knizhka po Eniseĭskomu pereselenchskomu raĭonu na 1912 god . 1912 . Izd. Pereselencheskago upravlenīi͡a G. U. Z. i Z. . S.-Peterburg . ru.
  40. Web site: Dogurevich . T. A. . Svet Azii. Rasprostranenie khristianstva v Sibiri v svi︠a︡zi s opisaniem byta, nravov, obychaev i religioznykh verovaniĭ inorodt︠s︡ev ėtogo krai︠a︡. . 2022-10-12 . Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA.
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  42. Web site: Devel . F.D. . 1896 . ГПИБ Девель Ф. Д. Рассказы о Восточной Сибири, то есть о губерниях, Енисейской и Иркутской, об области Приморской и об округах Якутском и Забайкальском : с рисунками и картой Сибири. - М., 1896. . Stories about Eastern Siberia, that is, about the provinces, Yenisei and Irkutsk, about the Primorsky region and about the districts of Yakutsk and Transbaikal: with drawings and a map of Siberia. . 2022-09-13 . elib.shpl.ru .
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