Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 652 pages of information about Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar.

Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 652 pages of information about Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar.

The day after leaving Sofyesk I observed a native propelling a boat by pulling both oars together.  On my expressing surprise my companion said: 

“We have passed the country of the Gilyaks who pull their oars alternately, and entered that of the Mangoons and Goldees.  The manner of rowing distinguishes the Gilyaks from all others.”

The Mangoons, Goldees, and Gilyaks differ in much the same way that the tribes of American Indians are different.  They are all of Tungusian or Mongolian stock, and have many traits and words in common.  Their features have the same general characteristics and their languages are as much alike as those of a Cheyenne and Comanche.  Each people has its peculiar customs, such as the style of dress, the mode of constructing a house, or rowing a boat.  All are pagans and indulge in Shamanism, but each tribe has forms of its own.  All are fishers and hunters, their principal support being derived from the river.

The Goldee boat was so much like a Gilyak one that I could see no difference.  There was no opportunity to examine it closely, as we passed at a distance of two or three hundred feet.

Besides their boats of wood the Goldees make canoes of birch bark, quite broad in the middle and coming to a point at both ends.  In general appearance these canoes resemble those of the Penobscot and Canadian Indians.  The native sits in the middle of his canoe and propels himself with a double-bladed oar, which he dips into the water with regular alternations from one side to the other.  The canoes are flat bottomed and very easy to overturn.  A canoe is designed to carry but one man, though two can be taken in an emergency.  When a native sitting in one of them spears a fish he moves only his arm and keeps his body motionless.  At the Russian village of Gorin there was an Ispravnik who had charge of a district containing nineteen villages with about fifteen hundred inhabitants.  At Gorin the river is two or three miles wide, and makes a graceful bend.  We landed near a pile of ash logs awaiting shipment to Nicolayevsk.  The Ispravnik was kind enough to give me the model of a Goldee canoe about eighteen inches long and complete in all particulars.  It was made by one Anaka Katonovitch, chief of an ancient Goldee family, and authorized by the emperor of China to wear the uniform of a mandarin.  The canoe was neatly formed, and reflected favorably upon the skill of its designer.  I boxed it carefully and sent it to Nicolayevsk for shipment to America.

The Ispravnik controlled the district between Habarofka and Sofyesk on both banks of the river, his power extending over native and Russian alike.  He said that this part of the Amoor valley was very fertile, the yield of wheat and rye being fifteen times the seed.  The principal articles cultivated were wheat, rye, hemp, and garden vegetables, and he thought the grain product of 1866 in his district would be thirty thousand poods of wheat and the same of rye.  With a population of fifteen hundred in a new country, this result was very good.

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Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.