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NOVGOROD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 839 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NOVGOROD  , a

government of N.W . Russia, bounded W. and N. by the governments of St
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Petersburg and
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Olonets, S.E. by
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Vologda, Yaroslav and
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Tver, and S.W. by
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Pskov, stretching from S.W. to N.E . 450 M .
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Area, 47,223 sq. m . Pop . (1906) 1,555,700 . The S. is occupied by the Valdai plateau, in which are the highest elevations of
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middle Russia (600 to over r000 ft.), as well as the
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sources of nearly all the
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great rivers of the country . The plateau is deeply furrowed by valleys with abrupt slopes, and descends rapidly towards the basin of Lake Ilmen in the %V . (only 6o ft. above the sea-level) . The N.E. of the government belongs to the lacustrine region of N.W . Russia . This tract is dotted over with innumerable sheets of
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water, of which Byelo-ozero (White Lake) and Vozhe are the largest of more than 3000 .

Inlmense marshes, overgrown with thin forests of

birch and
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elm, occupy more than one-seventh of the entire area of the government; several of them have an area of 300 to 450 sq. m. each . They admit. of being crossed only when frozen . Six centuries ago they were even less accessible, but the slow upheaval of N.W . Russia, going on at the
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rate of 3 or more feet per century, has exercised a powerful influence upon the drainage of the country . Of
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recent years artificial drainage has been carried out on a large scale . The forests still occupy 550/o of the
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total area of the government . Geologically, Novgorod exhibits in the W. vast beds of Devonian limestones and sandstones; these are elsewhere overlaid with Carboniferous
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limestone,
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dolomite, sandstones and marls . The Devonian gives rise to salt-springs, especially at Staraya Russa (S. of Lake Ilmen), and contains iron-ores, while the more recent formation has
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coal strata of inferior quality . The whole is covered with a thick
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sheet of boulder-clay, very often arranged in ridges or eskers, the bottom
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moraine of the N .
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European ice-sheet of the Glacial period . Numerous remains of the neolithic Stone Age are found, especially round the
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extinct lakes . The Baltic and
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Caspian Sea basins are connected by the
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Mariinsk, Tikhvin and Vyshniy-Volochok canals, while the Alexander-von-
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Wurttemberg canal connects the tributaries of the White Sea with those of the Baltic .

The

chief
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river is the Volkhov, which flows from Lake Ilmen into Lake Ladoga . Other navigable rivers are the Syas, also flowing into Lake Ladoga, and the Sheksna and the Mologa, tributaries of the Volga . The Msta and the Lovat are the
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principal streams in the basin of Lake Ilmen . All boats from the Volga to St Petersburg pass through this government . The yearly
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average temperature at Novgorod is only 40° Fahr . (14.5° in
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January, 62.5° in
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July) . The severe
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climate, the marshy or stony
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soil, and the want of grazing grounds render agriculture unprofitable, though it is carried on everywhere . The yield of
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rye and other cereals is insufficient for the wants of the inhabitants . Fireclay, coal and
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turf are extracted in commercial quantities .
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Building, smith-
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work, fishing,
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shipbuilding, distilleries, glass and match factories, sawmills and a variety of domestic
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industries give occupation to about 40,000 families . Hunting is still profitable . But most of the inhabitants are dependent on the river-boat
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traffic; and nearly one-
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fourth of the able-bodied
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males are annually driven to other parts of Russia . in search of work .

The Novgorod carpenters and masons have

long been renowned . Trade is chiefly in grain and
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timber, and in manufactures and grocery wares from St Petersburg . The fairs are numerous, and several of them (Kirilovsk monastery, Staraya Russa and Cherepovets) show considerable returns . The inhabitants are almost exclusively Great-Russians, but they are discriminated by some historians from the Great-Russians of the basin of the Oka, as showing remote
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affinities with the Little-Russians . They belong mostly (96i%) to the Orthodox Greek Church, but there are many Nonconformists . There are 1o,000 Karelians and 9000 Chudes, with some Jews and some Germans . Novgorod is well provided with educational institutions, and
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primary
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education is widely diffused in the villages . (P . A . K.; J . T .

End of Article: NOVGOROD
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