These photographs were taken in the Siberian Yeniseysk Governorate in the 20th century. They remain in the archive of the city of Krasnoyarsk’s local museum. This is visual history: the local residents’ livelihoods, deer herding and shipping on the Yenisei River, and constructing churches. But the most interesting and astounding is, of course, the faces of people who lived at the beginning of the 20th century.
Archive photoIn 1822, the Russian territory of Siberia was divided into the Western and Eastern parts. The Yeniseysk Governorate, a territorial unit that united 5 okrugs, was created.
Archive photoKrasnoyarsk became the governorate’s capital and is now the largest among Siberia’s oldest cities.
Archive photoThe governorate’s longest stretch extends from China to the northernmost edge of Asia, measuring 2800 versts (2,984 km).
Archive photoIn 1911, Yeniseysk Governorate was designated as the place of exile for vagrants. As such, prison authorities sent former convicts who had served their sentences here in 1913 in order to form permanent settlements. In that same year, there were already 46.7 thousand exiles living in the region.
Archive photoThe ethnic make-up of the governorate was as such in 1920: Russians — 84.0%, Ukrainians — 3.7%; Belarusians — 2.4%; Latvians — 1.2%; Tatars — 1.2%; other — 6.5%.
Archive photoOnly 10 percent of the population lived in cities. The rest lived in settlements, villages, or wandered from place to place as they primarily herded deer.
Archive photoThe Yeniseysk Governorate existed for 103 years. On May 25, 1925, all of the regions and governorates in Siberia were abolished and merged into a single Siberian Krai with its capital in Novosibirsk.
Archive photoToday, the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk (current population around 975,000) is the capital of an eponymous region that is also one of the largest administrative regions in Russia, stretching from the Republic of Tuva, which shares a border with Mongolia, all the way to the Kara and Laptev Seas in the Arctic Ocean.
Archive photoFounded in 1628 as a frontier outpost on the southern reaches of the mighty Yenisei River, for the first century of its existence Krasnoyarsk consisted of little more than a Cossack detachment.
Archive photosIts name is a Russian translation of the original site name, “red riverbank,” in the local Khakas language.
Archive photosFor the first century of the settlement’s existence, life for the local Cossacks and peasants hardly rose above subsistence level, particularly with the harsh Siberian climate.
Archive photosYet, the area's rich natural resources eventually gave rise to industrial and craft production during the 18th century, particularly after the subduing of the southern steppe tribes and the opening of the Moscow Road (1735-41), a more even, southerly route that redirected settlement and transportation in Siberia. Copper smelting and ironworking factories were in operation by the 1750s.
Archive photosAs with Omsk to the west, Krasnoyarsk was transformed in the late 19th century from a provincial garrison town into a major transportation center by the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railroad, begun in 1891. By 1895, Krasnoyarsk was connected by rail with European Russia, and subsequently with Irkutsk and the Far East.
Archive photosAfter the revolution, the industrialization campaign of the 1930s led to the construction of major new sites for heavy industry in Krasnoyarsk.
Archive photosThe evacuation of factories from the European part of the Soviet Union in 1941-42 added to this process.
Archive photosThe city subsequently became a center for hydroelectric power and aluminum production. Growth during the Soviet period was reflected in the construction of a number of large public buildings.
Archive photosSome of Krasnoyarsk’s growth around this time can also be attributed to its position as a center of the Gulag system. In the immediate post-Soviet period, the population and economic strength of Krasnoyarsk declined noticeably, but the city has rebounded in recent years.
Archive photosAll rights reserved by Rossiyskaya Gazeta.
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