(Redirected from Yuri Lisiansky)
'Yuri Fyodorovich Lisyansky' (also spelled as 'Urey Lisiansky') (,
August 13,
1773—
March 06,
1837) was an officer in the
Imperial Russian Navy and
explorer.
In 1786 he graduated from the
Navy Cadet Corps and took part in the
Russo-Swedish War (1788-1790). During 1790-1793 he served in the
Baltic Fleet. During 1793-1799 he sailed British ships all over the globe.
In 1803-1806 Lisyanski as the commanding officer of the
sloop-of-war ''Neva'' took part in the first Russian
circumnavigation of the
Earth headed by
Krusenstern. They started from
Kronstadt, but the ships split after visiting
Hawaii and Lisianski headed to
Alaska. In 1804 the Neva visited
Easter Island.
[1] In 1805 they met again in
Macau, but lost each other again. Eventually, ''Neva'' was first to return to Kronstadt on
July 22,
1806. For this feat Lisyanski was awarded in various ways, including the decoration with the
Order of Saint Vladimir of 3rd degree.
Lisyanski was buried in the
Alexander Nevsky Monastery.
A number of places are named after him:
Lisianski Island, Hawaii (discovered by him), a peninsula of the
Baranof Island, Alaska, a bay, a strait, a river, a cape in
North America, an undersea mountain in
Okhotsk Sea and a peninsula by the Okhotsk Sea.
References
★ Voyage round the world in the Ship "Neva" Lisiansky, London 1814