The promyshlenniki (, промышленник, promyshlennik) were Russians and Indigenous Siberian artel members, or self-employed workers drawn largely from the state serfdom and townsman class who engaged in the Siberian, maritime, and later .
Initially, the Russians in Russian America were Siberians fur-hunters, river-merchants, and mercenaries, although many later worked as , , , and craftsmen. The promyshlenniki formed the backbone of Russian trading-operations in Russian Alaska. Some of them worked on preliminary request contracts, including for the Russian-American Company, and their duties and activities became less involved in the company's fur-gathering activities.
Following the Russian conquest of Siberia, as a part of the regional fur trade, the opportunities offered by this newly available luxury product drew many Russians eager to make a profit in newly conquered territories. Service-men that arrived, rarely able to receive a stable salary from the state. Merchants began to visit the Russian settlements, interested in selling the gathered furs at various markets. The promyshlenniki were free men who made their living any way they could. When petitioning the tsar, a service-man would call himself 'your Kholop' and a promyshlennik 'your orphan'. These people were often called Cossacks, because they did not pay any personal taxes to the state. They paid only the trading tariff, and were required to participate in wars with their weapons and ammunition, food and fodder, similarly to American rangers.
As the Russian Empire expanded its bureaucratic network into Siberia, Russian colonists were able to be placed under Imperial regulations. Fur operations ran by promyshlenniki were altered with the oversight by the officials, as they now had to "bring all his catch or his purchase to the town in proper season, submit his furs to the tsar's agents for sorting, appraisal, and taxation (usually, as we noted, 10 per cent). He must not trade with natives except in the town and then only in certain seasons; he must not ply natives with liquor; he must return his remaining furs to European Russia along approved routes and submit them to continual inspection." The fierce competition between promyshlenniki led to the overexploitation of sable populations, continually forcing them to go further east. With the decline of European demand for sable furs at the end of the 17th century, so did its price; making many promyshlenniki partake in caravans headed to the Qing Empire, or selling their furs the border town of Kyakhta. Promyshlovik began to gather sable pelts located in the Amur River during the early 17th century. Trappers based out of Nerchinsk regularly crossed the Qing border into what became Russian Manchuria, or Outer Manchuria, by the 1730s to pursue sable populations residing there. Russian officials were aware of these operations, but "tolerated any breach of the Russian-Chinese treaties which might occur."
The Lebedev-Lastochkin Company sent the first Russian promyshlennik to investigate the resources of the lower Yukon River in 1790. The party, led by the hunter Ivanov, traveled from Iliamna Lake to the Kuskokwim and Yukon rivers. Ivanov reported on the extensive fish and game resources and the many people inhabiting the region. At first the traders returned to Kamchatka after every season but eventually trading posts were established in the territory. These posts began in the Aleutians and moved eastward toward the Alaska Peninsula rather than north to the Yukon delta and Bering Strait.
Many promyshlenniki became employees of the Russian-American Company (RAC) after it was established in 1799. Under the RAC promyshlenniki performed tasks such as hunting, supervision of sea otter hunting parties, carpentry, shipbuilding, farming and ranching at Fort Ross, California, guard duty, and a variety of other work. An example of an important RAC employee who was born into serfdom near Kursk, sold to the RAC, called a promyshlennik by the RAC, and played a key role in RAC expansion into California, was Timofei Nikitich Tarakanov.
Russian America
Relations with Aleut and Alutiiq people
Lifestyle
See also
Notes
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