Russkoye Ustye

Russkoye Ustye

Russkoye Ustye ( _ru. Русское Устье; also transcribed Russkoe Ustye) is a village in the Allaikhovsky Ulus of Sakha Republic, Russia. It is located in the delta of the Indigirka River, some 80 km from the fall ("ustye") of the rivers westernmost ("Russkoye", i.e. 'closest to [European] Russia') arm into the East Siberian Sea of the Arctic Ocean.

For several decades during the Soviet era, the village was officially called Polyarnoye (Полярное).

Russkoye Ustye was settled by ethnic Russians several centuries ago. As no agriculture is possible at this Arctic location, they developed an economy based on hunting, fishing and trapping. Since the place is north of the Arctic tree line, driftwood brought by the Indigirka was used for construction and for firewood. Due to the remarkable geographic isolation of the settlement, its residents preserved much of their ancestors' beliefs, customs, and folklore into the 19th and 20th century, which made the village a favorite destination for Russian ethnographers and cultural anthropologists.

It is speculated that the original settlers, possibly of Pomor origin, arrived to the delta of the Indigirka as early as the first half of the 17th century. More skeptical researchers believe that the second half of the 17th century would be a more likely time for the initial settlement. [А. И. Гоголев. "ИСТОРИЯ ЯКУТИИ: (Обзор исторических событий до начала ХХ в.)".(A.I. Gogolev. [http://www.ysu.ru/facultet/kfi/books/HistoryOfYakutiya.htm History of Yakutia: Review of Historical Events to the beginning of the 20th century] ) Yakutsk, 1999. ru icon]

The first known record of the community of Russkoye Ustye is in the reports of the explorer Dmitry Laptev, who had to spend a winter there in 1739 when his boat was stuck in the ice. A Socialist Revolutionary Vladimir Zenzinov gave an account of the village visited by him in the early 1900s, during his Siberian exile.Tatyana Bratkova [http://magazines.russ.ru/novyi_mi/1998/4/brat.html Russkoye Ustye] . Novy Mir, 1998, no. 4 ru icon]

It was only between 1928 (when a schoolhouse was built, and a schoolteacher arrived from the outside world) and the 1960s (the arrival of helicopters) that the village became reconnected, to an extent, with the "mainland" culture and integrated into the national economy. The pelts of arctic fox became the principal product sold by the villagers to the outside world.

Historically, the peoples of Russkoye Ustye were spread out over several tens of kilometers, living in solitary houses or tiny hamlets of 3-4 houses. Around 1940-42, the authorities arranged for them to move into a single village, which was given the name Polyarnoye. It was only in the late 20th century that the old name, Russkoye Ustye, was returned to the settlement.Valentin Rasputin. "Siberia, Siberia". Translated by Margaret Winchell, Gerald Mikkelson. Northwestern University Press, 1996. ISBN 0810115751. Chapter 7, "Russkoe Ustye". [http://books.google.com/books?id=ViPE-u1oRVAC On Google Books] ]

A Siberian writer, Valentin Rasputin, dedicated a chapter of his non-fiction book, "Siberia, Siberia" (originally published 1991) to the people of this isolated traditional community. Even though the villagers "seemed to be fashioned entirely out of prejudice", he favorably compares their ability to pass moral judgments with the moral relativism of the modern people.

References


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