PREZHEVALSKY
The town of Karakol lies at the eastern end of Lake Issyk Kul.
It's name in Kyrgyz means «Black Hand»
and although that may have connotations to Englishmen of a certain
age, it probably refers to the early Russian settlers and the
effect of working the soil in the region. Before Independence
the town was named after one of the great explorers of Central
Asian was Nicolay Mikhailovich Prezhevalsky. He actually spent far
more time «discovering» other parts of Central Asia than
wandering around Kyrgyzstan but had the misfortune to contract
a fatal disease and die here.
Although an important historical figure, (he is sometimes
referred to as the Russian equivalent of Livingstone),
Prezhevalsky has suffered a little because his attitude and reputation
as a Tsarist, a chauvinist and a colonist which did
not endear him to either the Soviets or the Kyrgyz. The Soviets,
unable to turn him into an idealogical figure, concentrated
on his tireless exploits exploring and mapping vast areas of Siberia,
Tibet and Central Asia.
He was born in a small village near Smolensk, in Western
Russia, on 12 April 1839, and from an early age he had
a passion for travel. His father was a sickly army officer pensioned
off at the age of 32 and it was expected that young
Nikolay would follow in his father«s footsteps. He left
school at 18 and duly joined the army. Although he never
enjoyed military life, apparently he decided, (like many young men
both before and afterwards), that an army career would given him
the best chance to «hit the road» and see the world.
He managed to persuade the Russian Geographical Society and
his senior officers that he would be a good explorer, and
the Society agreed to sponsor an expedition to the Usuri
river region in the Russian Far East in 186769.
Despite, at times, appalling conditions he collected many plan
specimens which he sent to the St. Petersburg Botanical
Gardens. The results impressed everyone and the Society agreed to help
finance future trips. His employers, (the army), were happy to give
him the time he needed, on the condition that, on his return
from each trip, he reported first to them before saying anything
to the Society in other words he became an Army
agent a spy.
Rising to the rank of Major General he became the most
honoured of all the Tsarist explorers. He never married
in fact he sometimes known as a mysoginist.
He focused on Central Asia, Launching four major expeditions
in 15 years, writing four books about his experiences. In all
he traveled some 32000 kilometers in Central Asia and mapped
some seven million square kilometers, including several major mountain
chains.
Mongolia, China and Tibet (187073) crossing
the Mongolian steppes and the Gobi Desert on the way to Beijing.
It was on this trip that he met the Tibetan Ambassador
to China who invited him to Lhasa to meet the Dalai Lama
but he was running out of money and the Tibetan winter was setting
in so he had to turn back. He spent the
next two years writing up the expedition, lectruring and drumming
up support for his next expedition.
Tian Shan, Lop Nor, Taklamakan desert and northern Xinjiang (187677)
He crossed into what is now Xinjiang across the Kazakh-Chinese
border and was surprised to discover that he was not the first
Russian to visit these parts. In 1861 a group of «Old
Belivers» had traveled here in search of a «promised
land» and after a couple of years struggling to farm
and hunt they decided to give up and return to Siberia.
Apparently only one girl survived (to become the favourite wife of the
Bey of Turfan) the others killed by rebellious tribesmen.
On this trip he discovered that the salt lake of Lop, Lop
Nor, as in fact some 100 miles away from where the Chinese
cartographers had placed it since ancient times. His report sparked
a great debate and when he returned to the region on later
trips he repeated his measurements and calculations and came to the
same conclusions. The mystery surrounding the «erronous» positioning
of the lake was not solved until Hedin visited the region in 1895,
1900 and again in 1928. He discovered salt flats where
the Chinese had once located the lake and what appeared to be a dry
river bed. He came to the conclusion that the river and lake had
changed their position once and was about to do so again.
Sure enough, when he returned in 1928 the lake and river
were back in their original locations.
Mongolia, China, Tibet (197980) through inhospitable
country; across mountain passes so high that there was barely enough
oxygen to light a fire so that water took two hours to boil
and harassed by tribesman the party eventually reached
a point only 260 km from Lhasa. The Tibetan authorities
refused him permission to proceeed and no amount of argument
or persuasion could make them change their minds and
so he was forced to turn around and head back home. It was
on this expedition that he discovered the tiny steppeland horse
that now bears his name Prehevalskys Horse
now, sadly, disappeared from its old habitats and surviving
only in zoos around the world. It was the world«s last
species of wild horse.
Mongolia, China, Tibet, Taklamakan desert and Tian Shan (188385)
setting out once more for Tibet, this time he was force back because
the Chinese had destroyed the bridges over the Tam Chu river and blocked
border passes by boulders cutting all the routes into Tibet. He turned
North again and the arriving in Kyrgyzsatn over the Bedel Pass, the
expedition ended at Karakol on the shores of Lake Issyk
Kul. From here Prezhevalsky returned to Moscow.
As a result of the invasion of Sikkim in 1886,
Britain was seen as beginning to show an interest in Tibet
and this was perceived as a threat to the empire. Who better
than Prezhevalsky to lead another expedition to Lhasa? In 1888 he returned
to Pishkek to prepare for what was to be his grandest
expedition. While hunting tiger by the Chui river he unwisely
drank the water, and contracted typhus. He was dispatched to Lake
Issyk Kul for rest and treatment but it became clear
that he wasn«t going to recover. He had a small
house built on a promontory overlooking the lake, with a small
chapel where he meditated and prayed. He wrote to the Tsar
asking to be photographed in his coffin dressed in his
explorers clothes and to be buried beside the lake,.
He died at the military hospital on 20 October 1888,
at the age of 49, and the town was renamed in his honour.
His house was preserved and has been turned into a small park and
museum. In the grounds a monument was erected depicting an eagle
atop a mountain. In the birds talons was placed a golden
baton
but in the uprising of 1916 it disappeared.
|