ALBAZIN, A RUSSIAN TOWN ON THE AMUR: POPULATION SIZE IN THE LATE 1600S
2017; Elsevier BV; Volume: 45; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.17746/1563-0110.2017.45.2.113-122
ISSN1563-0110
Autores Tópico(s)Eurasian Exchange Networks
ResumoJudging by modern studies and written sources, the town of Albazin, founded more than 330 years ago, had lost its western rampart facing the Amur and 17 % of the enclosed area (the latter totaled 7630 m 2 in 1684). Given the reports stating that the fort had a garrison of 222 men, it could not have accommodated 826 inhabitants during the 1686 siege. It is proposed that in the 1680s, owing to a military threat, Fort Albazin turned into a fortified town numbering more than 1000 inhabitants. The Cossacks used a nearby Mohe or Daur fortification, consisting of three ramparts and moats, to erect an external defense belt around the fort with a piece of land accommodating 53 houses. During the first three months of the war, more than 800 Cossacks defended the town from the Manchu attacks, after which the surviving defenders took refuge in the fort. The estimated population size at that time is 310, including 241 persons buried in dugouts, 66 survivors of the siege (women and children among them), and three Cossacks who left the fort in November 1686 to report on the siege.
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