Online Encyclopedia

SARATOV

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 207 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SARATOV  , a

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town of Russia, capital of the government of the same name, on the right
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bank of the Volga, 532 M. by
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rail S.E. of Moscow . It is one of the most important cities of eastern Russia, and is picturesquely situated on the side of hills which come close down to the Volga . One of these, the Sokolova (56o ft.), is liable to frequent landslips, and is a continual source of danger . The city is divided into three parts by two ravines; the
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outer two may be considered as suburbs . A large
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village, Pokrovsk (pop . 20,000), situated on the opposite bank of the Volga, though in the government of
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Samara, is in reality a suburb of Saratov . Apart from this suburb, Saratov had in 1882 a population of 112,430 (49,660 in 183o, and 69,66o in 1859), and 143,431 in 1900 . It is the see of an Orthodox Greek bishop and of a
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Roman Catholic bishop, and is better built than many towns of central Russia . Its old
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cathedral (1697) is a very plain structure, but the new one, completed in 1825, is
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fine, and has a striking campanile . The theatre and the railway station are also fine buildings . The streets are wide and
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regular, and there are several broad squares . A new fine-
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art gallery was erected in 1884 by the painter Bogolubov, who bequeathed to the city his collection of
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modern pictures and
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objects of art .

A school of

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drawing and the public library are in the same
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building, the Radishchev Museum . Agriculture and gardening support a section of the population . The cultivation of the
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sunflower deserves
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special mention . Of the manufacturing establishments the distilleries rank first in importance; next come the liqueur factories,
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flour-mills, oil-
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works, railway workshops and
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tobacco-factories . The city has a trade not only in corn, oil, hides, tallow, woollen
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cloth, wool, fruits and various raw produce exported from Samara, but also in salt from the Crimea and
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Astrakhan, in iron from the Urals and in wooden wares from the upper Volga governments . Saratov also supplies south-eastern Russia with manufactured articles and grocery wares imported from central Russia . The shallowness of the Volga opposite the town and the immense shoals along its right bank are, however, a
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great
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drawback to its usefulness as a
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river-
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port . The town of Saratov was founded at the end of the 16th century, on the
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left bank of the Volga, some 7 M. above the
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present site, to which it was removed about 1605 . The place it now occupies (Sary-tau or Yellow Mountain) has been inhabited from remote antiquity . Although founded for the maintenance of order in the Volga region, Saratov was several times pillaged in the 17th and 18th centuries . The peasant leader Stenka Razin took it, and his followers kept it until 1671; the insurgent Cossacks of the Don pillaged it in 1708 and the rebel
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Pugachev in 1774 .

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