- Urup
Urup ( _ru. Уруп; Japanese 得撫島; Uruppu) is one of the
Kuril Islands to the north ofJapan . Its area is about 1,430 km². The highest point isGora Ivao (1,426 m).The island was originally within the fief of the
Matsumae clan, before coming under the control of theHokkaidō regional government. SinceWorld War II , Urup has been a part ofSakhalin Oblast inRussia .Administratively this island belongs to the
Sakhalin Oblast of theRussian Federation .The strait between Urup and
Iturup is known as theVries Strait , after Dutch explorerMaarten Gerritsz Vries , the first recorded European to explore the area. [ [http://www.sakhalin.ru/Engl/Region/book/17th_18th.htm THE 17TH AND 18TH CENTURIES ] ]The strait between Urup and
Simushir is known as theBoussole Strait , after the French word for "compass", which was the name of one of La Pérouse's vessels. This French mariner explored the area of the Kuril Islands in 1787.History
The island was originally inhabited by Ainu, the native peoples of the Kurils,
Sakhalin andHokkaidō . The first recorded visit by Europeans was in1643 , when a ship of theDutch East India Company commanded by Maarten Gerritsz Vries landed there, probably seeking furs.Russian fur traders appeared in the 18th century, hunting
sea otter and seizing foreign ships in the area. There were clashes between the Russians and the Ainu in1772 , and the Russians left for a time, but soon returned. G.F. Muller’s "Voyages & Découvertes faites par les Russes" (Amsterdam, 1766) contained a list and description of the Kurile islands, including Urup whose people were said to trade with the Japanese but were not under their control. A small Russian presence was established on Urup by the fur trader Ivan Chernyi in 1768, acting on instructions from the Governor of Siberia. During the 1770s it was the base for attempts to establish trade with the Japanese on Yezo (Hokkaido) which came to an end when it was destroyed by a tsunami in June 1780. [George A. Lensen, "The Russian Push toward Japan:Russo-Japanese relations, 1697-1875," Princeton University Press, 1959, pp.61-85; Valery O. Shubin, ‘Russian Settlements in the Kuril Islands in the 18-th and 19th centuries’, "Russia in North America: Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Russian America," Kingston & Fairbanks, Limestone Press,1990, pp. 425-450.]In
1801 , the Japanese government officially claimed control of the island, incorporating it into Ezo Province (now Hokkaidō Prefecture). This would soon lead to clashes with Russia over Urup and the other Kurils. The island officially became Russian territory in1855 , with a treaty that established a border at the strait between Urup andEtorofu (Iturup), but was traded back to Japan twenty years later in exchange for Sakhalin Island. It was during this time that the island came under the administration of the Hokkaidō prefectural authorities, and the Ainu were forced out.The island remained under Japanese authority until August of
1945 , when Soviet forces invadedManchuria and the Kurils, sending the Japanese inhabitants of Urup back to Hokkaidō. In1952 , upon signing theTreaty of San Francisco , Japan renounced its claim to the island. [ [http://www.fortunecity.com/olympia/ince/698/rurik/kuril.html History of the Kuril Islands] ]References
* [http://worldmaps.web.infoseek.co.jp/russia_guide.htm Location]
* [http://land.worldcitydb.com/ostrov_urup_4241843.html Geographic data]
* [http://www.globosapiens.net/jorgesanchez/picture-quiet-landscape-in-the-kuril-islands-32844.html Picture]External links
* [http://land.worldcitydb.com/sakhalinskaya_ã¢â€â™_in_russian_federation_state.html Sakhalin Oblast]
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