- Afanasy Nikitin
Afanasy Nikitin ("Афана́сий Ники́тин" in Russian) (? - 1472) was a
Russia n merchant and one of the firstEurope ans (afterNiccolò Da Conti ) to travel to and document his visit toIndia . He described his trip in a narrative known as the "The Journey Beyond Three Seas" ("Khozhdeniye za tri morya").In 1466, Nikitin left his hometown of
Tver on a commercial trip to India. He traveled down theVolga River , reachedDerbent , thenBaku and later Persia by crossing theCaspian Sea , where he would live for one year. In the spring of 1469, Nikitin arrived at the city ofOrmus and then, crossing theArabian Sea , reached the sultanate ofBahmani , where he would live for 3 years. On his way back, Nikitin visited theAfrica n continent (Somalia ), Muscat,Trabzon and in 1472 arrived atFeodosiya by crossing theBlack Sea . On his way to Tver, Nikitin died not far fromSmolensk in the fall of that year.During his trip, Nikitin studied the population of India, its
social system,government , military (he witnessed war-games featuring war elephants), its economy,religion , lifestyles, and natural resources. The abundance and trustworthiness of Nikitin's factual material provide a valuable source of information about India at that time.Nikitin, Christianity, and Islam
After studying Nikitin's account, and especially his references to Islam (at the time much of India was ruled by Muslim sultans and there were considerable numbers of Muslim merchants living along the coast), particularly the prayers he transliterates from Arabic and Turkic into Cyrillic letters, Gail Lenhoff and Janet Martin concluded that Nikitin probably converted to Islam while in India. [Gail Lenhoffand Janet Martin "The Commercial and Cultural Context of Afanasij Nikitin's Journey Beyond Three Seas." "Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas" 37, No. 3 (1989):321 - 344; See also Janet Martin, "Muscovite Travelling Merchants: The Trade with the Muslim East (Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries)." "Central Asian Studies" 4, No. 3 (1985):21 - 38.]
His loss of contact with Christianity and his life among Muslims (and apparent lapse from Christianity and conversion to Islam) bothered him and he mentions this several times in his account. Indeed, he begins his account calling it his "sinful voyage beyond three seas." He went on to explain that, while he continued to date events by Christian religious holidays and invoked the Mother of God and the saints("the Holy Fathers"), he could not remember when Christian holidays were, so he could not celebrate Easter and other movable feast days or keep the Christian fasts (Lent, the St. Peters' Fast, the fast during Advent, etc.). Thus, he kept the fasts of the Muslims and broke fast when they did. He also wrote that at Bindar in the third year of his journey he "shed many tears for the Christian faith." Very near the end of his account, he wrote of his wish to return home and to the Christian faith: "I, Afanasy, a damned servant of Almighty God, Maker of heaven and earth, pondered over the Christian faith, the Baptism of Christ, the fasts established by the Holy Fathers, and the apostolic commandments, and I longed to go [back] to Rus!" [For a translation of Nikitin's account, see Richard H. Major, ed. "The Travels of Athanasius Nikitin," tr. Mikhail M. Wielhorsky. In "India in the Fifteenth Century". Hakluyt Society, ser. 1. volume 22. (London: Hakluyt Society, 1857). See also the online English translation at: http://www.russian-centre-mumbai.org/history.htm]
Nikitin in modern memory
In 1955, the local authorities of Tver erected a
bronze monument to Afanasy Nikitin on the bank of the Volga River. There is a story that this statue was raised because Nikita Khrushchev upon visiting India, told Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru that there was a statue of Nikitin in Russia when in fact there was not (Nehru had asked if the Russians had honored the first Russian to visit India). So as not to be proven a liar, Khrushchev phoned back to Russia demanding that a statue of Nikitin be built immediately, before Nehru's state visit to Russia. The statue was featured on a Russian postage stamp in 2005 commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the establishment of the Tver region (oblast). [See "Stamp News International" at: http://www.stampnews.com/stamps/stamps_2005/stamp_1173967252_581033.html] Nikitin was also featured on a coin commemorating the 525th anniversary of his journey.In 1958,
Mosfilm produced a film entitled "The Journey Beyond Three Seas" withOleg Strizhenov (he was named aPeople's Artist of the USSR in 1988) cast as Afanasy Nikitin.In 2000, a black obelisk was erected in Nikitin's honor at
Revdanda , 120 km south ofMumbai , the probable location where he first set foot in India.In 2006, the Indian organization "Adventures & Explorers," with the support of the Embassy of India in Moscow and the Tver Regional Administration sponsored the "Nikitin Expedition", in which 14 travellers set out from Tver to retrace Nikitin's journey through Russia, the Middle East, and Central Asia to India. [See the online press report from the Embassy of India in Moscow at: http://www.indianembassy.ru/en/en_05_04_t0311_2006.html] The expedition lasted from November 12, 2006 to January 16, 2007. The Indian national newspaper, "
The Hindu ," filed several reports of the expedition's progress. [See the online versions of the articles at: http://www.hindu.com/2006/12/10/stories/2006121000542000.htm and http://www.hindu.com/2006/11/26/stories/2006112602291000.htm] After reaching India, two members of the "Nikitin Expedition" set out in March 2007 from Mumbai (formerly known as Bombay) in SUVs to retrace Nikitin's travels around India itself. "The Calcutta Telegraph" filed a report on its progress in one of its March editions. [See the online version of the article at: http://www.telegraphindia.com/1070322/asp/nation/story_7550104.asp]ee also
*
Daniel Kievsky References
* [http://www.russian-centre-mumbai.org/history.htm#an Mumbai Russian Cultural Centre]
* [http://www.kamat.com/kalranga/itihas/nikitin.htm Nikitin - The first Russian traveler to India by Dr. Jyotsna Kamat]
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