Nikolai Petrovich Rezanov (, 28 March 1764 – 13 March 1807), a Russian nobleman and statesman, promoted the project of Russian colonization of Alaska and California to three successive Emperors of All Russia—Catherine the Great, Paul, and Aleksander I. Aleksander I commissioned Rezanov as Russian ambassador to Japan (1804) with the aim of concluding a commercial treaty. In order to get to his post he was appointed co-commander of the First Russian circumnavigation (1803–1806), led by Adam Johann von Krusenstern. Rezanov left the expedition in 1805 when it returned to Kamchatka after visiting Japan (1804–1805).
Rezanov wrote a lexicon of the Japanese language and several other works, which are preserved in the library of the Saint Petersburg Academy of Sciences, of which he was a member.[1] Rezanov's greatest legacy proved the founding of the Russian-American Company in 1799.
Early life
Rezanov was born in Saint Petersburg on 28 March 1764. He mastered five languages by the age of 14. He joined the Izmaylovsky Regiment at the same age and left five years later in 1784 as captain.[2] Rezanov then spent five years as a court officer in Pskov.[3] In 1791, he joined the staff of Gavrila Derzhavin in his capacity as the private secretary to the Empress Catherine II. Platon Zubov took interest in Rezanov, hiring him as an aide within a year of his employment with Derzhavin.[4] Zubov became interested in the fur trade activities of Irkutsk merchant Grigory Shelikhov. His influence with Catherine was used to secure priests from the Valaam Monastery and colonists for Shelikov's settlements on Kodiak Islands.
Interest in fur trade
In the winter of 1793, Rezanov was appointed as Zubov's personal representative to oversee the fledgling operations.[5] In August 1794, Rezanov arrived at Irkutsk, the center of the Shelikhov-Golikov Company, a city where his father Pyotr had once served as a civil servant for several decades.[6] He likely joined Shelikhov in visiting Kyakhta during the annual trading with the Qing Empire.[7] Rezanov found the land routes to China "inefficient and archaic" when compared to the naval trade of the British in Guangzhou.[7] In January 1795, he married Shelikhov's and Natalia Shelikova's 14-year-old daughter Anna, who came with a dowry in shares of Shelikhov's company.[8] Anna died in childbirth seven years later.
Death
He died of fever and exhaustion in Krasny Yar (now Krasnoyarsk), Siberia, on 8 March 1807.[19] His grave was destroyed by Bolsheviks, but his remains were reburied. On 28 October 2000, at Rezanov's grave in the Trinity churchyard of Krasnoyarsk (where according to one account his remains were moved in the late 1950s) there was a service for the dead and the dedication of a memorial to Rezanov. Poets had taken up the story of Rezanov and Conchita, turning it into a famous romance in Russia. The memorial has a white cross, bearing on one side the inscription "Nikolai Petrovich Rezanov 1764 — 1807. I will never forget you", and on the other side — "Maria Concepcion de Arguello 1791 — 1857. I will never see you again", quoting the lines from "Juno and Avos" by Andrei Voznesensky.
Legacy
Rezanov's romance with Concepción became the subject of Concepcion de Arguello, a ballad by the San Francisco author, Francis Bret Harte, and a 1937 novel, Rezánov and Doña Concha, by the largely forgotten San Francisco author Gertrude Atherton, who had also written a biography of Rezanov on the centennial of his romance with Concepcion.
In 1979, the composer Alexei Rybnikov and the poet Andrey Voznesensky wrote one of the first Russian rock operas, choosing the love affair of Rezanov and Concepcion as their subject and naming the opera after two of Rezanov's ships, Juno and Avos. The original production has enjoyed immense success in the Lenkom Theatre and is still being performed to standing ovations as of 2013. The original actor playing Rezanov from 1979 to 2005, Nikolai Karachentsov, was seriously injured in a car crash in 2005, and has been replaced in the production by Dmitry Pevtsov and Viktor Rakov.
The High Mass for the two lovers was attended by Gary E. Brown, Police Chief of the city of Monterey, California. He was in Siberia as part of a Pointman Leadership Institute team to instruct the National Police in Ethical Based Leadership. Chief Brown scattered on Rezanov's tomb some earth from Conchita's grave, and at the suggestion of Monterey resident John Middleton, a rose from her burial site, and took some earth from Rezanov's grave to scatter on the resting place of Concepcion de Arguello in Benicia, California. "It will connect them forever in a symbolic way" said the chief. He went on to share that the love story which took place 200 years ago forever united the cities of Krasnoyarsk and Monterey.
See also
- Alexandr Baranov
- Nikolay Muravyov-Amursky
External links
- Webpage on Rezanov
- Rezanov's mission in Japan
- Ermolaev I. N. "Pskov. Nikolay Rezanov (1764-1807)"
- Bret Harte's poem "Concepcion De Arguello"
- Photo shoot reenactment shot at the Presidio of San Francisco by David Louis Klein in 2006 in which David portrays Rezanov, Monic Munoz plays Arguello
References
- {{EB1911|inline=y|wstitle=Rezánov, Nicolai Petrovich de|volume=23|pages=229–230|first=Gertrude|last=Atherton|author-link=Gertrude Atherton}}^
- Matthews, Owen. Glorious Misadventures: Nikolai Rezanov and the Dream of a Russian America. New York City: Bloomsbury. 2013, pp. 37-39. ISBN 978-1-4088-2223-4^
- Owen (2013), p. 41.^
- Owen (2013), p. 54.^