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ATHANASIUS NIKITIN

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 690 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ATHANASIUS NIKITIN  , of
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Tver (fl . 1468-1474),
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Russian merchant, traveller and writer, the earliest known Russian visitor to India . He started in 1468 on his " wanderings beyond the Three Seas " (
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Caspian, Euxine and
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Indian Ocean), and descended the Volga, passing by
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Uglich,
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Kostroma, Nizhniy Novgorod, Kazan, Sarai and
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Astrakhan . Near the latter he was attacked and robbed by Tatars; but he succeeded in reaching Derbent, where he joined Vasili Papin, the envoy of
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Ivan III. of Moscow to the shah of
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Shirvan; from Nizhniy Novgorod he had travelled with
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Hasan Bey, the Shirvan shah's ambassador, returning to his master with a
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present of falcons from Ivan . At Derbent Nikitin vainly endeavoured to get means of returning to Russia; failing in this, he went on to
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Batu, where he notices the " eternal fires," and thence over the Caspian to Bokhara . Here he stayed six months, after which he made his way southward, with several prolonged stoppages, to the Persian Gulf, through
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Mazandaran province and the towns of Amul, Demavend, Ray (near Tehran),'
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Kashan, Nain, Yezd, Sirjan, Tarun,
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Lar and Bandar, opposite New (or insular) Hormuz . From Hormuz he sailed by Muscat to
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Gujarat, Cambay and Chaul in western India . Landing at Chaul, he seems to have travelled to Umrut in Aurangabad province, south-east of
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Surat, and thence to Beder, the
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modern Ahmedabad . Here, and in adjacent regions, Nikitin spent nearly four years; from the little he tells us, he appears to have made his living by horse-dealing . From Beder he visited the
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Hindu sanctuary (" their Jerusalem ") of Perwattum . He returned to Russia byway of
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Calicut, Dabul, Muscat, Hormuz, Lar,
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Shiraz, Yezd, Isfahan, Kashan, Sultanieh,
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Tabriz, Trebizond and
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Kaffa (
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Theodosia) in the Crimea . He has
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left us descriptions of western Indian manners, customs, religion, court-ceremonies, festivals, warfare and trade, of some value; but the text is corrupt, and the narrative at its best is confused and meagre .

His remarks on the trade of Hormuz, Cambay, Calicut, Dabul,

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Ceylon,
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Pegu and
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China; on royal progresses and other functions, both ecclesiastical and
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civil, at Beder; and on the wonders of the
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great
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fair at Perwattum—as well as his comparisons of things Russian and Indian—deserve
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special
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notice . Two
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MSS. are known: (I) in the library of the
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cathedral of St Sophia in Novgorod; (2) in the library of the TroItsa Monastery (Troitsko-Sergievskaya Lavra) near Moscow . See also the edition by Pavel Mikhailovich Stroev in Sofiiskii Vremennik (A.D . 862-1534), pt. ii. pp . 145-164 (Moscow, 182o-1821) ; and the
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English version in India in the 15th Century, pp. lxxiv.-lxxx.; 1-32 (separately paged, Nikitin's being the third narrative in the
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volume, translated and edited by Count Wielhorski;
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London, Hakluyt Society, 1857) . (C . R .

End of Article: ATHANASIUS NIKITIN
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