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Ivan Kruzenstern
'Adam Johann' Ritter von (knight of) 'Krusenstern' (born
November 19,
1770 in Hagudi, close to
Rapla,
Estonia (then a part of the
Russian Empire), died
August 24,
1846 in Kiltsi, Estonia) was the
Russian admiral and
explorer who in
1803-
1806 led the first Russian
circumnavigation of the Earth. In Russia, Krusenstern is known as 'Ivan Fedorovich Kruzenshtern' (''Иван Фёдорович Крузенштерн'').
Krusenstern was born into a
Baltic German family descended from the Swedish aristocratic family von Krusenstjerna, which remained in Estonia after the province was ceded to Russia. In 1787, he joined the
Russian Imperial Navy and subsequently served in the
British Navy in 1793-99. In
1803-
1806, under the patronage of Tsar
Alexander I and Baron
Nikolai Rezanov, Krusenstern led the first Russian
circumnavigation of the world. The purpose of the two-ship expedition was to establish trade with
China and
Japan, facilitate trade in
South America, and examine
California for a possible colony.
The two ships, ''Nadezhda'' (Hope) under the command of Krusenstern, and ''Neva'' under the command of Captain-Lieutenant
Yuri F. Lisianski, set sail from
Kronstadt, rounded
Cape Horn, and reached the northern
Pacific. Both
seafarers made
maps and detailed recordings of their voyages.
Upon his return, Krusenstern wrote a detailed report, ''Reise um die Welt in den Jahren 1803, 1804, 1805 und 1806 auf Befehl Seiner Kaiserl. Majestät Alexanders des Ersten auf den Schiffen Nadeshda und Newa'' (Journey around the World in the Years 1803, 1804, 1805, and 1806 at the Command of his Imperial Majesty Alexander I in the Ships Nadezhda and Neva) published in
Saint Petersburg in 1810. It was published in 1811-1812 in
Berlin; this was followed by an English translation, published in
London in 1813 and subsequently by French, Dutch, Danish, Swedish, and Italian. His scientific work, which includes an atlas of the Pacific, was published
1827 in
St. Petersburg and won him an honorary membership in the
Russian Academy of Sciences. He died in 1846 in Kiltsi manor (he had bought this manor in 1816).
In memoriam
The Russian
training tall ship ''
Kruzenshtern'' is named after him. To commemorate the 200th anniversary of Krusenstern's circumnavigation, the ship retraced his route around the globe in 2005-2006.
There is
Krusenstern crater on the
Moon.
In Russia (as well as in other
Russophone places), a fictional
steamship "Admiral Ivan Fyodorovich Kruzenshtern" from the popular ''
Prostokvashino''
animated film series is very well known, often as part of a
catch phrase "Admiral I.F.Kruzenshtern, a man and a steamship", "pirated" from the title of a requiem poem by
Vladimir Mayakovsky, ''To Comrade Nette, a Man and a Steamship''. As a third-level linguistic derivation, there is a Russophone
Israel klezmer-
rock band,
Kruzenshtern & Parohod ("Krusenstern and Steamship").
External links
★
Ilya Vinkovetsky, ''Circumnavigation, Empire, Modernity, Race: The Impact of Round-the-World Voyages on Russia's Imperial Consciousness'', "Meeting of Frontiers" Conference, 2001
★
Website of the barque ''Kruzenshtern''
★
''Kiltsi manor (in German: Schloss Ass)'' from Estonian Manors Portal
★
''Hagudi manor (in German: Haggud)'' from Estonian Manors Portal
★
Biographic entry from ''Nordisk familjebok'' (in Swedish)