Through Siberia 2 Volume Set
The Church of England clergyman Henry Lansdell (1841–1919) was an energetic traveller, both during his own leisure time and on behalf of the Irish Church Missions. He made many visits to Russia and central Asia, distributing bibles and tracts in the native languages of the many peoples he encountered, and focusing his attention especially on hospitals and prisons. He published this two-volume account in 1882, and it proved extremely popular (this second edition being prepared before the first was published), but it attracted some criticism for its favourable treatment of the Russian government. The anarchist Prince Peter Kropotkin was especially indignant at the accounts of Russian prisons: he alleged that Lansdell was either a dupe of propaganda or was deliberately distorting what he had seen. Volume 1 includes Lansdell's experience of the prison and exile systems of Siberia. Volume 2 includes further travels among the native peoples of the Russian Far East.
Product details
April 2014Multiple copy pack
9781108071246
906 pages
216 × 140 mm
1.15kg
44 b/w illus. 2 maps
Available
Table of Contents
- Volume 1: Preface to second edition
- Preface to first edition
- 1. Introductory
- 2. Across Europe
- 3. The Urals to Tiumen
- 4. The exiles
- 5. From Tiumen to Tobolsk
- 6. Siberian prisons
- 7. Siberian prisons (cont.)
- 8. The Obi
- 9. Tobolsk
- 10. From Tobolsk to Tomsk
- 11. Tomsk
- 12. Siberian posting
- 13. From Tomsk southwards
- 14. Barnaul
- 15. The Siberian church
- 16. The Siberian church (cont.)
- 17. From Tomsk to Krasnoiarsk
- 18. The Yenisei
- 19. A visit to a gold-mine
- 20. From Krasnoiarsk to Alexandreffsky
- 21. The Alexandreffsky central prison
- 22. A city on fire
- 23. Irkutsk
- 24. The Lena
- 25. Yakutsk
- 26. Across Lake Baikal to Troitzkosavsk
- 27. The Siberian frontier at Kiakhta
- 28. The Mongolian frontier at Maimatchin
- 29. From Kiakhta to Chita
- 30. The Buriats. Volume 2:
- 31. Siberian political prisoners
- 32. From Chita to Nertchinsk
- 33. The silver and (so-called) quicksilver mines of Nertchinsk
- 34. From Nertchinsk to Stretinsk
- 35. From Stretinsk to Ust-Kara
- 36. The penal colony of Kara
- 37. The convict mines of Kara
- 38. The Shilka
- 39. The history of Amur
- 40. The upper Amur
- 41. Blagovestchensk
- 42. The middle Amur
- 43. The Manchurian frontier
- 44. The Primorsk or sea-coast province
- 45. The lower Amur
- 46. The Gilyaks
- 47. Nikolaefsk
- 48. Kamchatka
- 49. The island of Sakhalin
- 50. The Ussuri and Sungacha
- 51. Lake Khanka to the coast
- 52. Vladivostock
- 53. Russians afloat
- Appendices
- Index.