(Redirected from Andrei Bolotov)
Bolotov's watercolour representing the chateau and park in
Bogoroditsk (1786).
'Andrey Timofeyevich Bolotov' (
18 October,
1738 —
16 October,
1833) was the most distinguished
Russian
agriculturist of the
18th century.
Bolotov was born and spent most of his adult life in the family estate of Dvoryaninovo, in the
Tula region to the south of
Moscow. He was brought up by his parents in
Livland, where his father's regiment was stationed. After taking part in the
Seven Years' War he settled into retirement in Dvoryaninovo.
During his life there, he brought out a pioneering manual on
crop rotation and elaborated an innovative system of
pomology which included more than 600
cultivars of apple and pear. Always interested in
plant breeding, Bolotov discovered
dichogamy of apple-trees and pointed out to the advantages of
cross-pollination.
Bolotov's works brought him to the attention of Count
Orlov, who asked him to manage the neighbouring estate of
Bobriki, where
Catherine II's illegitimate son, Count
Bobrinsky, was being raised. Bolotov turned Bobriki into the most up-to-date agricultural estate in provincial Russia and ensured the keen interest which later Counts Bobrinsky would take in agriculture.
Bolotov was also active in the
Free Economic Society, which published his treatise on
forestry. Together with
Nikolay Novikov, he edited the journals ''The Village Resident'' (1778-79) and ''The Magazine of Economics'' (1780-89), which brought him the income of 400 roubles a year, a very considerable sum for the time. His extensive memoirs, entitled ''Life and Adventures of Andrei Bolotov, in 26 parts'' and written between
1789 and
1816, went through several editions and were translated into English. Bolotov died in Dvoryaninovo aged 96.
References
★ Бердышев А. П. ''А. Т. Болотов - первый русский учёный агроном.'' М., 1949