Arriving in Transbaikalia, Beketov set off. Pioneer Beketov P.I.

Petr Beketov

Pyotr Beketov (born c. 1600 died c. 1661), the founder of Siberian cities, Pyotr Beketov entered the service of the Sovereign in 1624 in the archery regiment. He was sent to Siberia in 1627. In 1628, he was sent by the Yenisei governor to the Trans-Baikal Buryats to impose yasak on them. Beketov coped with the task more successfully than his predecessor Maxim Perfilyev, collected a rich yasak, and besides, he became the first person to overcome the Angara rapids. Here, on Buryat land, Beketov built the Rybinsk prison. In 1631, Beketov was again sent from Yeniseisk on a distant campaign. This time, at the head of thirty Cossacks, they had to go to the great Lena River and gain a foothold on its banks. The well-known historian of Siberia of the eighteenth century, I. Fisher, regarded this business trip as recognition of the merits and abilities of a person who had done quite a lot for the state. In the spring of 1632, Beketov's detachment was already on the Lena. Not far from the confluence of the Aldan River, the Beketov Cossacks cut down a small fortress. This prison played an enduring role in all further discoveries, became for Russia a window on Far East and Alaska, Japan and China. The activity of Pyotr Beketov in Yakutia does not end there. Being a clerk in the Yakut prison, he sent expeditions to Vilyui and Aldan, founded Zhigansk in 1632, and Olekminsk in 1636. After I. Galkin arrived to replace him, our hero returned to Yeniseisk, from where in 1640 he took yasak worth 11 thousand rubles to Moscow. In Moscow, Beketov received the rank of archer and Cossack head. In 1641, Pyotr Beketov was granted a boyar son. In 1652, again from Yeniseisk, P.I. Beketov, whose skill and diligence were already known, again set out on a campaign against the Transbaikal Buryats. Coming to the mouth of the Selenga, Beketov and his comrades founded the prison of Ust-Prorva. After that, his detachment moved up the Selenga, climbed up the Khilok to Lake Irgen. Near the lake in 1653 the detachment founded the Irgen prison. In late autumn, having crossed the Yablonovy Ridge, his detachment of 53 people descended into the valley of the river. Ingoda. The path from Irgen to Ingoda traversed by Beketov later became part of the Siberian Route. Since the Ingoda had risen from the frost, the Ingoda Zimovye was founded in the area of ​​\u200b\u200bpresent-day Chita. In November 1654, 10 Cossacks of the Beketov detachment, led by Makim Urasov, reached the mouth of the Nerchi River, where they laid the Nelyudsky prison (now Nerchinsk). A painting and drawing was drawn up for the Irgen Lake and other lakes on the Kilka River (R. Khilok), which fell from the Irgen Lake, and the Selenge River, and other rivers that fell into the Vitim River from the Irgen Lake and from other lakes .

In the Shilkinsky prison, Beketov and his comrades survived a difficult winter, not only suffering from hunger, but also holding back the siege of the rebellious Buryats. By the spring of 1655, having improved relations with the Buryats, the detachment was forced to leave the prison and, in order not to die of hunger, go to the Amur. From this moment on, the data of different authors about the life of the ataman diverge. In the capital of Siberia, Tobolsk, the exiled archpriest Avvakum, sent there in 1656, met with Beketov. In his book The Life of Archpriest Avvakum ... he writes that, while in Yeniseisk, P. Beketov came into conflict with the fiery archpriest in order to protect his ward from anathema, after which ... he went out of the church to die a bitter death of evil ... . I.E. Fisher names a much later date, when P.I. Beketov was still alive. According to him, after wandering along the Amur, in 1660 Beketov returned to Yeniseisk through Yakutsk and brought with him a lot of sables, which served as protection for him to avert punishment, which he feared for leaving the prison. In the same place, in Tobolsk, Yuri Kryzhanich, a Serb, a Catholic priest who was exiled to Siberia in 1661, met with Beketov. I personally saw the one who first erected a fortress on the banks of the Lena,” he wrote. 1661 is the latest mention of Beketov's name in historical literature. If we allow ourselves to assume that none of our informants is mistaken and does not lie, then it turns out that the conflict between Beketov and Avvakum, who was returned from exile to Moscow in 1661, occurred at the very end of the Siberian epic of the latter, and Yuri Kryzhanich saw Beketov shortly before his death. All data converge, and it turns out that in 1660 Beketov from Yeniseisk left for service in Tobolsk, where in 1661 he met both Avvakum and Kryzhanich. Thus, we can consider at least approximately the date of death of a person who has done so much to consolidate Russian state on its eastern borders. Unfortunately, the date of birth of the founder of Chita is unknown .. But if we assume that in 1628 he was at least thirty years old (no one would put an inexperienced youth at the head of a serious expedition), then in 1661 he was already an old man, so from the shock caused by a serious conflict does not seem surprising. The fact that Pyotr Ivanovich Beketov was an outstanding person is evidenced by many authors. P. Slovtsov writes about him: Servant with zeal. G. Miller notes the diplomatic and military talents of the centurion. Even Archpriest Avvakum, a man extremely strict in assessing people, calls him the best boyar son, and writes about the conflict with him: There is still grief for my soul ....

I.Fischer, one of the first historians of Siberia, was not shy at all in enthusiastic assessments of the personality and activity of Pyotr Beketov. Indeed, how much diplomatic talent, military cunning worthy of Odysseus, human courage he showed for a long period of service to Russia! And how much fortitude he needed to have, a man of the seventeenth century, an old man, in order to stop the anathema from the lips of the fiery archpriest in the main temple of Tobolsk, an anathema against the man whom Beketov was instructed to only protect! In Moscow there is a monument to Yuri Dolgoruky, in St. Petersburg to Peter I, in Lvov to Prince Danila Romanovich, in Kyiv to Kiy, Schek and Khoriv ... Most Russian and European cities honor the memory of their founders or, if they are unknown, the first rulers. In Chita, even somewhere in the backyards, in the middle of nowhere, there is no monument, bust, or even a memorial plaque to the founder of the city. Did not deserve? Special thanks to Andrei Bukin for the information provided. We wish success to his project Staraya Chita

Pyotr Ivanovich Beketov

Beketov, Petr Ivanovich (? - 1658?) - Russian explorer, son of a boyar (nobleman), from Tver and Dmitrovsky boyar children. He served in Yeniseisk from 1626. In 1627 he was appointed as a shooter in the Yenisei jail. In the spring of 1628 he went on a campaign to pacify the Lower Angara Tungus (Evenks). In the lower reaches of the Angara, Beketov's detachment built the Rybinsk Ostrozhek. In the autumn of 1628 B. organized the collection of yasak from the peoples of the Angara region. In 1630 he "rested" in Yeniseisk. In May 1631 he was sent on the Lena River, to the uluses of the Buryats-Ekherites, where he built a "string". Having lost the fortress, Beketov retreated to the mouth of the Tutura River, where he set up a small prison and received yasak from the Nalyagir Tungus. In the summer of 1632 he gave explanations to the Yakut toyons of the middle Lena.

In September 1632, Beketov's detachment built the first sovereign prison in Yakutia on the right bank of the Lena. As a result, 31 toyon-princes recognized Russian power. In June 1633, Beketov handed over the Lena prison to the son of the boyar P. Khodyrev and went to Yeniseisk. In 1635-1636 he set up the Olekminsky prison and made trips along the rivers Vitim, Bolshoy Patom and "other side rivers". In the spring of 1638, having lost the rank of centurion, he was sent to serve in the Lensky prison as a clerk. He made a campaign against the prince of the Nuriktey volost Kirinei. In 1640 he was sent to Moscow, where he was appointed Cossack head (first assistant governor) to Yeniseisk. In 1648 he was dismissed from office.

In June 1652, Beketov set out on a campaign to Lake Irgen and the Nercha River to explore silver deposits. In the winter of the same year, his detachment passed the left tributary of the Angara Osu. After several skirmishes with the Buryats, he crossed Baikal and stopped for the winter at the mouth of the Prorva River. In June 1653 the detachment reached the mouth of the Selenga. On the Angara again was attacked by the Buryats. The expedition reached its destination only at the end of September 1653. By mid-October, the Irgen prison was set up, and the Cossacks began to descend the Ingoda on rafts. Because of the early freeze-up, Beketov returned to the Irgen prison.

On the Shilka River, Beketov was going to build a large prison, but did not have time due to the attack of the Tungus detachments. He retreated down the Shilka to the Amur, where in the "army" of Onufry Stepanov from March 13 to April 4, 1655 he "fought clearly" in the defense of the Kumar prison besieged by the Manchus. This refutes the testimony of the archpriest Habakkuk, as if Beketov “died a bitter evil death” in his court in Tobolsk in early March 1655. Most likely, Beketov died on the Amur in a fight with the Manchus on June 30, 1658. However, the last unverified information about Beketov ( G. F. Miller, I. E. Fisher) date back to 1660, when he allegedly returned to Yeniseisk through Yakutsk and Ilimsk. Tradition ascribes to Beketov the discovery of the Nerchinsk silver deposits.

T. A. Bakhareva.

Russian historical encyclopedia. T. 2. M., 2015, p. 423.

Streltsy centurion and ancestor of the poet A. A. Blok

Beketov Pyotr Ivanovich (1610-1656), explorer, from service people. Born ca. 1610. His father and some relatives served "by choice" from Tver and Arzamas. Appeared in Siberia in 1620/21. He began his service in Tobolsk (c. 1624). In 1627, at the personal petition of Beketov, an order came from Moscow to appoint him a shooter centurion, whose salary was 12 rubles. 25 altyn, 78 four rye, 4 four oats per year. This appointment was opposed by the Yenisei Cossacks, who put forward their candidacy - clerk M. Perfilyev. However, Beketov won, who was not inferior to the clerk in literacy, courage, energy and independence in judgments and actions. Later, in his campaigns in Siberia, he learned to speak in local languages.

In 1627-1629 he participated in the campaigns of the Yenisei service people up the Angara to the mouth of the river. Good luck. He laid the Rybinsk (1627) and Bratsk (1628) prisons. In the autumn of 1630 he came to the Lena through the Ust-Kutsk winter hut; with 20 Cossacks he went up the Lena to the mouth of the “Ona River” (Apay?) and discovered more than 500 km of its upper reaches, a little before reaching the sources. It was not immediately possible to bring the local Buryats "under the sovereign's hand"; the Cossacks, hastily building a crepe, withstood a three-day siege. In this "land" to collect yasak, Beketov left 9 Cossacks, headed by foreman A. Dubina, and with the rest went down to the mouth of the Kulenga. From there, Beketov made a sortie to the west, in the steppes of the Leno-Angara plateau. On the 5th day he met the Buryat camps and demanded yasak in the name of the "white king", but the Buryats did not obey. Beketov quickly made a notch out of the forest and sat down in it. But every hour new help arrived to the Buryats. Finally, they surrounded the notch from all sides, waiting for the night to set fire to it. Beketov drew attention to the Buryat horses grazing near the yurts, made an unexpected sortie, captured the horses and rode them with a detachment for a whole day back to the upper Lena; they stopped only opposite the mouth of the Tutura, which flows into the Lena below the Kulenga, where the Evenks, who were friendly to the Russians, lived. There Beketov founded the Tutur prison. From this area, the Cossacks returned to the mouth of the Kuta, where they spent the winter. In the spring of 1631, Beketov with 30 Cossacks began rafting down the Lena, and up the river. Kireng "for the discovery of new lands" he sent Dubina with 7 Cossacks.

In con. June 1632 Beketov sent "to look for profits ... to the mouth of the Lensky and to the sea [Laptev] ... to new lands" 9 Cossacks led by I. Paderin. In August 1632, Beketov sent a detachment of Yenisei Cossacks, led by A. Arkhipov, down the Lena. Beyond the Arctic Circle, in the area "Zhigan Tungus" , they set up a Zhigansk winter hut on the left bank of the Lena to collect yasak. Beketov himself went to the middle Lena and explored the south. part of a giant bend in the river. At the top of the arc in the fall of 1632, in a very uncomfortable area, he set up the Yakut prison, which constantly suffered from floods during the flood, and 10 years later it had to be moved 15 km lower, to where the city of Yakutsk now stands. But on the other hand, this area, the most advanced to the east, was chosen by Beketov exceptionally well, and the Yakut prison immediately became the starting point for the Russian. search campaigns not only to the north, to the Icy Sea, but also to the east, and later to the south - to the river. Shilkar (Amur) and to the Warm Sea ( Pacific Ocean). In the spring of 1633, other Cossacks sent by Beketovs tried, together with the industrialists, to sail along the Vilyui on a ship in order to impose yasak on the Evenks on the river. Markha, his sowing. large tributary. The Yenisei wanted to penetrate into those “Lena lands” in this way, to which the Mangazeians claimed by right of discoverers, but at the mouth of the Vilyuy they met with the Mangazeian detachment of S. Korytov, who captured the ship of the Yenisei, and attracted them to their side, promising a share of the booty. In Jan. 1634 up to 3 thousand Yakuts laid siege to the Yakut prison, where at that time approx. 200 Cossacks, industry. and bargaining. people attracted by the hopes of rich booty. The Yakuts, unaccustomed to military operations, quickly abandoned the siege. Some of them went to remote areas, the rest continued to resist. In pursuit of some, in the struggle with others, the Russians went around the basin of the middle Lena in different directions and got acquainted with it. In 1635, at the confluence of the Olekma with the Lena, B. set up the Ust-Olekminsky prison and from it went “for yasak collection” along the Olekma and its chapter. tributary - Chara, as well as along Bolshoi Patom and Vitim, and the first one visited the north. and app. outskirts of the Patom Highlands. In 1638 he was appointed head of the Cossack and Streltsy with a salary of 20 rubles. in year. Beketov's personal economy was rather modest: in 1637 he owned 18 dess. arable land and 15 dess. fallow, which was much less than the possessions of some boyar children in the same Tobolsk.

In 1641 he came to Moscow with yasak. Beketov enjoyed great prestige not only in his service environment, but also with the government. So, in 1647, being the head of the Cossack, according to the "sovereign" decree, he arrested and imprisoned the Yenisei governor F. Uvarov for 3 days for saying some "obscene words" in his formal replies to Tomsk. In 1650 he again traveled to Moscow with yasak. To establish the power of the Russian tsar in Transbaikalia in June 1652, by order of the Yenisei governor A.F. Pashkov, Beketov led a detachment of 300 people. went up the Yenisei and the Angara to the Bratsk prison. From there to the sources of the river. Milok, a tributary of the Selenga, Beketov sent an advance group of the Pentecostal I. Maksimov with a guide - Cossack Y. Sofonov, who had already visited Transbaikalia in the summer of 1651. Beketov, having lingered in the Bratsk prison, was forced to spend the winter south of the mouth of the Selenga, where he laid the Ust-Prorvinsky prison. There the Cossacks prepared a huge amount of fish.

In 1653 B. went to the lake. Irgen, where he set up the Irgen prison. June 1653 went to clarify the road to the river. Khilok. On July 2, 1653, he sent Cossacks from the new “sovereign’s” winter hut to the ulus of Tsarevich Lubsan to say: “... I am going with service people according to the sovereign’s decree to Irgen Lake and the great river Vilka with good, and not with war and not with battle. ..", after which he began to climb the Khilok and, together with the detachment of Maximov, whom he met on the road, in the first days of October arrived at the source of the river. Here the Cossacks cut down the prison, and Maksimov handed over to Beketov the collected yasak and the drawing of the river. Khilok, Selenga, Ingoda and Shilka, compiled by him during the winter, are, in fact, the 1st hydrographic. map of Transbaikalia. Beketov was in a hurry to penetrate as far as possible to the east. Despite the late season, he crossed the Yablonovy Ridge and built rafts on Ingoda, but the early winter, common in this region, forced him to postpone everything until next year and return to Hillok.

In May 1654, when Ingoda was freed from ice, he went down it, went to Shilka and against the mouth of the river. Nercha set up a prison. But the Cossacks failed to settle here: the Evenks burned the sown grain, and the detachment had to leave due to lack of food. Beketov went down the Shilka to the confluence with the Onon and was the first Russian to leave Transbaikalia for the Amur. I followed the top. the course of the great river to the confluence of the Zeya (900 km), he joined with the Cossacks of the foreman O. Stepanov, who was appointed instead of Khabarov "the commanding officer ... of the new Daurian land." A man of independent character, Beketov knew how to appease his pride for the sake of business. When he, with the remnants of his detachment in the summer of 1654, from "grain scarcity and need ... descended" to the Amur, he stood under the command of Stepanov, although his rank was much higher than his new commander. The united detachment (no more than 500 people) spent the winter in the Kumar prison, set up by Khabarov about 250 km above the mouth of the Zeya, at the mouth of the rights. tributary of the Amur River. Kumara (Khumarhe). In Mar.-Apr. 1655 A detachment of 10,000 Manchus surrounded the prison. The siege lasted until April 15: after a bold sortie by the Russians, the enemy left. In June, the combined forces of the Russians descended to the mouth of the Amur, to the land of the Gilyaks, and cut down another prison here, where they stayed for the 2nd winter. B., with his Cossacks and collected yasak, moved up the Amur in August and arrived in Yeniseisk through Nerchinsk. He was the first to trace the entire Amur, from the confluence of the Shilka and Argun to the mouth (2824 km) and back. Upon his return to Tobolsk (early 1656) he was appointed to the "bailiff" to the deacon of the St. Sophia Cathedral I. Struna. “Beketov's life was cut short quite tragically.

In the winter of 1656, having caught a cold on the way, he was sick and returned from Yeniseisk to Tobolsk. Trouble awaited here. His friend, former comrade on campaigns, and now clerk of the Judgment Order of the Sofia House of the Siberian Archbishop Simeon, Ivan Struna, on the denunciation of the notorious archpriest who was then exiled in Tobolsk Habakkuk was arrested. Of course, neither the archpriest nor Struna were holy people. For a long time they lived in harmony, not without benefit to each other. But a month before the arrival of Archbishop Simeon from Moscow, a feud broke out between them because of hidden unshared money. The archpriest managed to gain confidence in Simeon and accused the far from disinterested, but rustic Ivan Struna of various “violent” sins. The string was arrested and handed over “for bailiffs” to Beketov, who was supposed to guard him. March 4, 1656 in the main cathedral of Tobolsk, Ivan Struna was anathematized - a terrible punishment for those times. Pyotr Beketov, who was present right there in the cathedral, could not stand it and began to openly scold the archpriest and the archbishop himself, "barking obscenely like a dog." A man who was not afraid of either bullets, or arrows of "foreigners", or the wrath of the governor ... could afford this. There was a noise. The frightened archpriest hid, and the enraged Beketov left the cathedral. And, as the same Habakkuk writes, on the way Peter “... went mad, going to his court, and died a bitter evil death.” Apparently, from a strong shock (and besides, he was already sick), he had a heart failure. The overjoyed archpriest hurried to the scene. Simeon ordered the corpse of Beketov, as a "great sinner", to give to the dogs on the street, and forbade all Tobolsk residents to mourn Peter. For three days the dogs gnawed at the corpse, while Simeon and Avvakum “prayed diligently” and then “honestly” buried his remains.” According to F. Pavlenkov, Beketov is the maternal ancestor of the poet A. A. Blok.

Vladimir Boguslavsky

Material from the book: "Slavic Encyclopedia. XVII century". M., OLMA-PRESS. 2004.

Founder of Siberian cities

Beketov Pyotr Ivanovich (born c. 1600–1610, died c. 1656-1661) explorer, from service people. The exact date of birth has not been established. The closest ancestors of P.I. Beketov belonged to the layer of provincial boyar children. In 1641, Pyotr Beketov himself indicated in a petition: “And my parents, sir, serve you ... in Tver and in Arzamas according to the yard and by choice”

Pyotr Beketov entered the service of the Sovereign in 1624 in the archery regiment. In January 1627, Beketov personally submitted a petition to the order of the Kazan Palace with a request to appoint him as a shooter centurion in the Yenisei jail. In the same year, he was promoted to archery centurion with a monetary and grain salary and sent to Yeniseisk.

In 1628-1629 he participated in the campaigns of the Yenisei service people up the Angara. Beketov coped with the task more successfully than his predecessor Maxim Perfilyev, became the first person to overcome the Angara rapids. Here, on the Buryat land, Beketov built the Rybinsk prison (1628). Here, for the first time, yasak was collected from several "fraternal" princes. Later, Pyotr Ivanovich recalled that he “walked from the Bratsk threshold along the Tunguska up and along the Oka River and along the Angara River and to the mouth of the Uda River ... and brought brotherly people under your sovereign’s high hand.”

On May 30, 1631, Beketov, at the head of thirty Cossacks, went to the great Lena River with the task of gaining a foothold on its banks. The well-known historian of Siberia of the eighteenth century, I. Fisher, regarded this “business trip” as recognition of the merits and abilities of a person who had done quite a lot for the state. The Lena campaign lasted 2 years and 3 months. It was not immediately possible to bring the local Buryats "under the sovereign's hand". In September 1631, Beketov, with a detachment of 20 Cossacks, moved from the Ilim portage up the Lena. The detachment went to the uluses of the Buryats-Ekhirites. However, the Buryat princes refused to pay tribute to the king. Having met resistance, the detachment managed to build a "string" and for 3 days sat under siege. A detachment of Buryats led by princes Bokoy and Borochey, using military cunning, penetrated the fortress. The fight continued with hand-to-hand combat. The onslaught of the Cossacks was swift. In the battle, 2 Tungus were killed and one Cossack was wounded. Taking advantage of the confusion of the enemy, servicemen, having captured Buryat horses, reached the mouth of the Tutura River. Here Beketov set up a Tutur prison. The natives, having heard about the prison, preferred to migrate to Baikal, but the Tungus-Nalagirs, who had previously paid tribute to them, "the sovereign's high hands were frightened" and brought Beketov yasak. From this area, the Cossacks returned to the mouth of the Kuta, where they spent the winter.

In April 1632, Beketov received reinforcements from 14 Cossacks from the new Yenisei governor Zh. V. Kondyrev and an order to go down the Lena. In September 1632, Beketov built the first sovereign prison in Yakutia near the confluence of the Aldan River with the Lena. This fortress played an enduring role in all further discoveries, became for Russia a window to the Far East and Alaska, Japan and China (it is located on the right bank of the Lena, 70 km below modern Yakutsk). The activity of Pyotr Beketov in Yakutia does not end there. Being a "prikaschik" in the Yakut prison, he sent expeditions to Vilyui and Aldan, founded Zhigansk in 1632. In total, as a result of the actions of the Beketov detachment, 31 toyon-princes recognized Russian power. In June 1633, Beketov handed over the Lensky Ostrozhek to his son P. Khodyrev, who arrived to replace him, and on September 6 he was already in Yeniseisk.

By 1635-1636. Beketov's new service applies. During these years, he sets up the Olekminsky prison, makes trips along the Vitim, Bolshoi Patom and "other side rivers"

In the spring of 1638 he went to the annual service in the Lena prison to replace I. Galkin. Beketov spent a year as a clerk in the Lensky prison.

In 1640, Beketov was sent with the Yenisei sable treasury for 11 thousand rubles to Moscow. Beketov enjoyed great prestige not only in his service environment, but also with the government. On February 13, 1641, taking into account all his previous merits, the Siberian order “granted headship” - appointed him the head of the Yenisei foot Cossacks.

In July 1647, Beketov received a letter sent to him from Moscow with an unusual order. He was instructed to imprison governor Fyodor Uvarov for 3 days, who was guilty of writing his replies to the discharge governors of Tomsk with “obscene speech”. If you believe Beketov's report, he faithfully complied with this decree.

In 1649-1650. Beketov was in the annual service in the Bratsk prison.

In 1650 Pyotr Beketov again traveled to Moscow with yasak.

In 1652, again from Yeniseisk, P. I. Beketov, “whose skill and diligence were already known,” again set out on a campaign against the Trans-Baikal Buryats. To establish the power of the Russian tsar in Transbaikalia, in June, on the orders of the Yenisei governor A.F. Pashkov, Beketov went with a detachment to the “Irgen Lake and the great Shilka River”. Beketov's detachment consisted of about 130-140 people. Despite the fact that the Cossacks were "hurriedly kind", they reached the Bratsk prison only after 2 months. It became clear to Beketov that during the summer the detachment would not be able to reach its final goal, and he decided to spend the winter on the southern coast of Lake Baikal at the mouth of the Selenga, where he laid the Ust-Prorvinsky prison. However, even from the Bratsk prison, he sent 12 Cossacks, led by I. Maksimov, lightly through the Barguzinsky prison to Irgen Lake and Shilka. Maximov was supposed to go through the Trans-Baikal steppes to Lake Irgen, where the upper reaches of the Khilok were located, and go down this river towards Beketov.

On June 11, 1653, Beketov set out from his winter hut on Prorva. The expedition reached its destination only at the end of September 1653. The detachment founded the Irgen prison near the lake. In late autumn, having crossed the Yablonovy Ridge, his detachment of 53 people descended into the valley of the river. Ingoda. The path from Irgen to Ingoda, traversed by Beketov, later became part of the Siberian Highway. By mid-October, the Irgen prison was set up, and on October 19, the Cossacks began to descend the Ingoda on rafts. Beketov, obviously, expected to reach the mouth of the Nercha before winter. However, having sailed along the Ingoda for about 10 versts, the detachment was met by an early freeze-up of the river. Here, at the mouth of the Rushmaleya, the Ingodinsky winter hut with fortifications was hastily erected, where part of the reserves were laid down. 20 people remained in the winter hut, 10 more Cossacks in November 1654, led by Makim Urazov, reached the mouth of the Nerchi River, where they laid Nelyudsky prison on the right bank of the Shilka. With the rest of the Cossacks, Beketov returned to the Irgen prison. Urazov reported to Beketov about the construction of the "small prison". The latter stated this in a reply to Pashkov, assuring the voivode that in the spring of 1654 he would set up a large prison in the place chosen by Urazov.

This winter, a “painting” and “drawing were drawn up for the Irgen Lake and other lakes on the Kilka River (R. Khilok), which fell from Lake Irgen, and the Selenga River, and other rivers that fell into the Vitim River from Irgen lakes and from other lakes. In May, Beketov was already on Shilka, where he was going to build, in accordance with Pashkov's order, a large prison. The Cossacks even sowed spring bread in the chosen place. However, the construction of Russian fortifications and the winter collection of yasak forced the Tungus tribes to take up arms. The Cossacks did not have time to build a prison, when "many Tungus people arrived exiled from the war." The Russian detachment was under siege (probably in the prison built by Urazov). The Tungus drove the horses away and trampled on the bread. Famine began among the Cossacks, since the Tungus did not allow fishing. The Yenisei had neither riverboats nor horses. They had the only way to retreat - on rafts, down the Shilka to the Amur.

On the Amur at that time, the most serious Russian force was the “army” of the clerk Onufry Stepanov, the official successor to E.P. Khabarova

At the end of June 1654, 34 Yenisei joined Stepanov, and a few days later Pyotr Beketov himself appeared, who “beat the entire Cossack army with his forehead so that he could live on the great Amur River until the sovereign’s decree.” All "Beketovites" (63 people) were accepted into the combined Amur army.

A man of independent character, Beketov knew how to appease his pride for the sake of business. When he, with the remnants of his detachment in the summer of 1654, from "grain scarcity and need ... descended" to the Amur, he stood under the command of Stepanov, although his rank was much higher than his new commander. In the autumn of 1654, Stepanov's army, which numbered just over 500 people, built the Kumar prison (at the confluence of the Khumarkhe River with the Amur). On March 13, 1655, the fortress was besieged by a 10,000-strong Manchu army. The Cossacks withstood many days of bombardment of the prison, fought off all the attacks and themselves made a sortie. Having failed, the Manchurian army on April 3 left the prison. Immediately after that, Stepanov compiled a personalized list of Cossacks who "fought clearly." Beketov, on behalf of the Yenisei service people, compiled a petition and added Stepanov to the replies. In this document, Beketov briefly outlined the reasons for leaving Shilka and asked for gratitude for the service shown in the defense of the Kumar prison. The meaning of the petition is clear - to bring to the attention of the official authorities the fact that he and his people continue to be in the sovereign's service. This document, dated April 1655, is so far the last reliable news about Beketov.

From this moment on, the data of different authors about the life of the ataman diverge. In the capital of Siberia - the city of Tobolsk, the exiled archpriest Avvakum, who was sent there in 1656, met with Beketov. In his book “The Life of Archpriest Avvakum...” he writes that, while in Yeniseisk, P. Beketov came into conflict with the “fiery” archpriest in order to protect his ward from the anathema, after which “... he went out of the church and died bitter evil death ... ".

I.E. Fisher names a much later date, when P.I. Beketov was still alive. According to him, after wandering along the Amur, in 1660 Beketov returned to Yeniseisk through Yakutsk and "brought with him a lot of sables, which served as protection for him to avert punishment, which he feared for leaving the prison."

In the same place, in Tobolsk, Yuri Kryzhanich, a Serb, a Catholic priest who was exiled to Siberia in 1661, met with Beketov. “I personally saw the one who first erected a fortress on the banks of the Lena,” he wrote. 1661 is the latest mention of Beketov's name in historical literature.

If we allow ourselves to assume that none of our “informants” is mistaken and does not lie, then it turns out that the conflict between Beketov and Avvakum, who was returned from exile to Moscow in 1661, occurred at the very end of the latter’s “Siberian epic”, and Yuri Kryzhanich saw Beketov shortly before his death. All data converge, and it turns out that in 1660 Beketov from Yeniseisk left for service in Tobolsk, where in 1661 he met both Avvakum and Kryzhanich. Thus, we can consider at least approximately the date of death of a person who did so much to consolidate the Russian state on its eastern borders.

Unfortunately, the date of birth of the founder of many Siberian cities is unknown. But if we assume that in 1628 he was at least thirty years old (no one would put an inexperienced youth at the head of a serious expedition), then in 1661 he was already an old man, so death from the shock caused by a serious conflict does not seem surprising.

However, it is possible that Beketov never returned from Amur. The story of Avvakum about the death in Tobolsk of the explorer Beketov can be recognized as unreliable.

In the census book of the Yenisei district of 1669, the widow of the son of the boyar Peter Beketov was named among the land sellers. Perhaps, after the death of her husband, she went back beyond the Urals, which is why we do not find the descendants of Pyotr Ivanovich in the service environment of Yeniseisk.

Russian traveler, explorer, governor, explorer of Siberia, founder of some Siberian cities - Nerchinsk, Olekminsk, Chita, Yakutsk

about 1600 - not earlier than 1661

Pyotr Beketov

short biography

Pyotr Ivanovich Beketov(about 1600 - not earlier than 1661) - Russian traveler, explorer, governor, explorer of Siberia, founder of some Siberian cities - Nerchinsk, Olekminsk, Chita, Yakutsk.

Service start

Entered the sovereign service in 1624 in the archery regiment. In 1627, according to his petition, he was sent to Siberia to the Yenisei jail.

In 1628, he was sent at the head of a detachment of ninety people on a campaign to pacify the Lower Angara Tungus, who attacked Maxim Perfilyev's detachment in 1627. He was instructed to influence the natives not by military methods, but by persuasion and "kindness". Beketov successfully coped with the task. In the lower reaches of the Angara, he set up a Rybinsk prison and returned to Yeniseisk with yasak and amanats.

Annexation of Yakutia

In 1631, Beketov was again sent from Yeniseisk on a distant campaign. This time, at the head of thirty Cossacks, they had to go to the great Lena River and gain a foothold on its banks. The well-known historian of Siberia of the eighteenth century, I. Fisher, regarded this “business trip” as recognition of the merits and abilities of a person who had done quite a lot for the state. In the spring of 1632, Beketov's detachment was already on the Lena. Not far from the confluence of the Aldan, the Beketov Cossacks cut down a prison, later called Yakutsk. Being a clerk in the Yakut prison, he sent expeditions to Vilyui and Aldan, founded Zhigansk in 1632, and Olekminsk in 1636.

Career advancement

After Ivan Galkin arrived to replace him, Peter returned to Yeniseisk, from where in 1640 he took yasak worth 11 thousand rubles to Moscow. In Moscow, Beketov received the rank of archer and Cossack head. In 1641, Peter Beketov was granted headship in the Yenisei prison among the Cossacks.

Buryat campaign

In 1652, again from Yeniseisk, P. I. Beketov, “whose skill and diligence were already known,” again set out on a campaign against the Transbaikal Buryats. Coming to the mouth of the Selenga, Beketov and his comrades founded the prison of Ust-Prorva. After that, his detachment moved up the Selenga, climbed up the Khilok to Lake Irgen. Near the lake in 1653 the detachment founded the Irgen prison. In late autumn, having crossed the Yablonovy Ridge, his detachment of 53 people descended into the valley of the Ingoda River. The path from Irgen to Ingoda, traversed by Beketov, later became part of the Siberian tract. Since Ingoda got up from the frost, the Ingoda winter hut was laid in the area of ​​\u200b\u200bpresent Chita. In November 1654, ten Cossacks of the Beketov detachment, led by Maxim Urasov, reached the mouth of the Nerchi River, where they laid the Nelyudsky prison (now Nerchinsk). A "painting" was drawn up and "drawing to Irgen lake and other lakes on the Kilk River(river Khilok), which fell from Lake Irgen, and the Selenga River, and other rivers that fell into the Vitim River from Lake Irgen and from other lakes". In the Shilkinsky prison Beketov, the "comrades" survived a difficult winter, not only suffering from hunger, but also holding back the siege of the rebellious Buryats. By the spring of 1655, having improved relations with the Buryats, the detachment was forced to leave the prison and, in order not to die of hunger, go to the Amur.

last years of life

In 1660, Beketov from Yeniseisk left for service in Tobolsk, where in 1661 he met with Archpriest Avvakum (with whom Beketov had a conflict) and with Yuri Krizhanich.

Pyotr Ivanovich Beketov

Beketov, Petr Ivanovich (? - 1658?) - Russian explorer, son of a boyar (nobleman), from Tver and Dmitrovsky boyar children. He served in Yeniseisk from 1626. In 1627 he was appointed as a shooter in the Yenisei jail. In the spring of 1628 he went on a campaign to pacify the Lower Angara Tungus (Evenks). In the lower reaches of the Angara, Beketov's detachment built the Rybinsk Ostrozhek. In the autumn of 1628 B. organized the collection of yasak from the peoples of the Angara region. In 1630 he "rested" in Yeniseisk. In May 1631 he was sent on the Lena River, to the uluses of the Buryats-Ekherites, where he built a "string". Having lost the fortress, Beketov retreated to the mouth of the Tutura River, where he set up a small prison and received yasak from the Nalyagir Tungus. In the summer of 1632 he gave explanations to the Yakut toyons of the middle Lena.

In September 1632, Beketov's detachment built the first sovereign prison in Yakutia on the right bank of the Lena. As a result, 31 toyon-princes recognized Russian power. In June 1633, Beketov handed over the Lena prison to the son of the boyar P. Khodyrev and went to Yeniseisk. In 1635-1636 he set up the Olekminsky prison and made trips along the rivers Vitim, Bolshoy Patom and "other side rivers". In the spring of 1638, having lost the rank of centurion, he was sent to serve in the Lensky prison as a clerk. He made a campaign against the prince of the Nuriktey volost Kirinei. In 1640 he was sent to Moscow, where he was appointed Cossack head (first assistant governor) to Yeniseisk. In 1648 he was dismissed from office.

In June 1652, Beketov set out on a campaign to Lake Irgen and the Nercha River to explore silver deposits. In the winter of the same year, his detachment passed the left tributary of the Angara Osu. After several skirmishes with the Buryats, he crossed Baikal and stopped for the winter at the mouth of the Prorva River. In June 1653 the detachment reached the mouth of the Selenga. On the Angara again was attacked by the Buryats. The expedition reached its destination only at the end of September 1653. By mid-October, the Irgen prison was set up, and the Cossacks began to descend the Ingoda on rafts. Because of the early freeze-up, Beketov returned to the Irgen prison.

On the Shilka River, Beketov was going to build a large prison, but did not have time due to the attack of the Tungus detachments. He retreated down the Shilka to the Amur, where in the "army" of Onufry Stepanov from March 13 to April 4, 1655 he "fought clearly" in the defense of the Kumar prison besieged by the Manchus. This refutes the testimony of the archpriest Habakkuk, as if Beketov “died a bitter evil death” in his court in Tobolsk in early March 1655. Most likely, Beketov died on the Amur in a fight with the Manchus on June 30, 1658. However, the last unverified information about Beketov ( G. F. Miller, I. E. Fisher) date back to 1660, when he allegedly returned to Yeniseisk through Yakutsk and Ilimsk. Tradition ascribes to Beketov the discovery of the Nerchinsk silver deposits.

T. A. Bakhareva.

Russian historical encyclopedia. T. 2. M., 2015, p. 423.

Streltsy centurion and ancestor of the poet A. A. Blok

Beketov Pyotr Ivanovich (1610-1656), explorer, from service people. Born ca. 1610. His father and some relatives served "by choice" from Tver and Arzamas. Appeared in Siberia in 1620/21. He began his service in Tobolsk (c. 1624). In 1627, at the personal petition of Beketov, an order came from Moscow to appoint him a shooter centurion, whose salary was 12 rubles. 25 altyn, 78 four rye, 4 four oats per year. This appointment was opposed by the Yenisei Cossacks, who put forward their candidacy - clerk M. Perfilyev. However, Beketov won, who was not inferior to the clerk in literacy, courage, energy and independence in judgments and actions. Later, in his campaigns in Siberia, he learned to speak in local languages.

In 1627-1629 he participated in the campaigns of the Yenisei service people up the Angara to the mouth of the river. Good luck. He laid the Rybinsk (1627) and Bratsk (1628) prisons. In the autumn of 1630 he came to the Lena through the Ust-Kutsk winter hut; with 20 Cossacks he went up the Lena to the mouth of the “Ona River” (Apay?) and discovered more than 500 km of its upper reaches, a little before reaching the sources. It was not immediately possible to bring the local Buryats "under the sovereign's hand"; the Cossacks, hastily building a crepe, withstood a three-day siege. In this "land" to collect yasak, Beketov left 9 Cossacks, headed by foreman A. Dubina, and with the rest went down to the mouth of the Kulenga. From there, Beketov made a sortie to the west, in the steppes of the Leno-Angara plateau. On the 5th day he met the Buryat camps and demanded yasak in the name of the "white king", but the Buryats did not obey. Beketov quickly made a notch out of the forest and sat down in it. But every hour new help arrived to the Buryats. Finally, they surrounded the notch from all sides, waiting for the night to set fire to it. Beketov drew attention to the Buryat horses grazing near the yurts, made an unexpected sortie, captured the horses and rode them with a detachment for a whole day back to the upper Lena; they stopped only opposite the mouth of the Tutura, which flows into the Lena below the Kulenga, where the Evenks, who were friendly to the Russians, lived. There Beketov founded the Tutur prison. From this area, the Cossacks returned to the mouth of the Kuta, where they spent the winter. In the spring of 1631, Beketov with 30 Cossacks began rafting down the Lena, and up the river. Kireng "for the discovery of new lands" he sent Dubina with 7 Cossacks.

In con. June 1632 Beketov sent "to look for profits ... to the mouth of the Lensky and to the sea [Laptev] ... to new lands" 9 Cossacks led by I. Paderin. In August 1632, Beketov sent a detachment of Yenisei Cossacks, led by A. Arkhipov, down the Lena. Beyond the Arctic Circle, in the area "Zhigan Tungus" , they set up a Zhigansk winter hut on the left bank of the Lena to collect yasak. Beketov himself went to the middle Lena and explored the south. part of a giant bend in the river. At the top of the arc in the fall of 1632, in a very uncomfortable area, he set up the Yakut prison, which constantly suffered from floods during the flood, and 10 years later it had to be moved 15 km lower, to where the city of Yakutsk now stands. But on the other hand, this area, the most advanced to the east, was chosen by Beketov exceptionally well, and the Yakut prison immediately became the starting point for the Russian. search campaigns not only to the north, to the Icy Sea, but also to the east, and later to the south - to the river. Shilkar (Amur) and to the Warm Sea (Pacific Ocean). In the spring of 1633, other Cossacks sent by Beketovs tried, together with the industrialists, to sail along the Vilyui on a ship in order to impose yasak on the Evenks on the river. Markha, his sowing. large tributary. The Yenisei wanted to penetrate into those “Lena lands” in this way, to which the Mangazeians claimed by right of discoverers, but at the mouth of the Vilyuy they met with the Mangazeian detachment of S. Korytov, who captured the ship of the Yenisei, and attracted them to their side, promising a share of the booty. In Jan. 1634 up to 3 thousand Yakuts laid siege to the Yakut prison, where at that time approx. 200 Cossacks, industry. and bargaining. people attracted by the hopes of rich booty. The Yakuts, unaccustomed to military operations, quickly abandoned the siege. Some of them went to remote areas, the rest continued to resist. In pursuit of some, in the struggle with others, the Russians went around the basin of the middle Lena in different directions and got acquainted with it. In 1635, at the confluence of the Olekma with the Lena, B. set up the Ust-Olekminsky prison and from it went “for yasak collection” along the Olekma and its chapter. tributary - Chara, as well as along Bolshoi Patom and Vitim, and the first one visited the north. and app. outskirts of the Patom Highlands. In 1638 he was appointed head of the Cossack and Streltsy with a salary of 20 rubles. in year. Beketov's personal economy was rather modest: in 1637 he owned 18 dess. arable land and 15 dess. fallow, which was much less than the possessions of some boyar children in the same Tobolsk.

In 1641 he came to Moscow with yasak. Beketov enjoyed great prestige not only in his service environment, but also with the government. So, in 1647, being the head of the Cossack, according to the "sovereign" decree, he arrested and imprisoned the Yenisei governor F. Uvarov for 3 days for saying some "obscene words" in his formal replies to Tomsk. In 1650 he again traveled to Moscow with yasak. To establish the power of the Russian tsar in Transbaikalia in June 1652, by order of the Yenisei governor A.F. Pashkov, Beketov led a detachment of 300 people. went up the Yenisei and the Angara to the Bratsk prison. From there to the sources of the river. Milok, a tributary of the Selenga, Beketov sent an advance group of the Pentecostal I. Maksimov with a guide - Cossack Y. Sofonov, who had already visited Transbaikalia in the summer of 1651. Beketov, having lingered in the Bratsk prison, was forced to spend the winter south of the mouth of the Selenga, where he laid the Ust-Prorvinsky prison. There the Cossacks prepared a huge amount of fish.

In 1653 B. went to the lake. Irgen, where he set up the Irgen prison. June 1653 went to clarify the road to the river. Khilok. On July 2, 1653, he sent Cossacks from the new “sovereign’s” winter hut to the ulus of Tsarevich Lubsan to say: “... I am going with service people according to the sovereign’s decree to Irgen Lake and the great river Vilka with good, and not with war and not with battle. ..", after which he began to climb the Khilok and, together with the detachment of Maximov, whom he met on the road, in the first days of October arrived at the source of the river. Here the Cossacks cut down the prison, and Maksimov handed over to Beketov the collected yasak and the drawing of the river. Khilok, Selenga, Ingoda and Shilka, compiled by him during the winter, are, in fact, the 1st hydrographic. map of Transbaikalia. Beketov was in a hurry to penetrate as far as possible to the east. Despite the late season, he crossed the Yablonovy Ridge and built rafts on Ingoda, but the early winter, common in this region, forced him to postpone everything until next year and return to Khilok.

In May 1654, when Ingoda was freed from ice, he went down it, went to Shilka and against the mouth of the river. Nercha set up a prison. But the Cossacks failed to settle here: the Evenks burned the sown grain, and the detachment had to leave due to lack of food. Beketov went down the Shilka to the confluence with the Onon and was the first Russian to leave Transbaikalia for the Amur. I followed the top. the course of the great river to the confluence of the Zeya (900 km), he joined with the Cossacks of the foreman O. Stepanov, who was appointed instead of Khabarov "the commanding officer ... of the new Daurian land." A man of independent character, Beketov knew how to appease his pride for the sake of business. When he, with the remnants of his detachment in the summer of 1654, from "grain scarcity and need ... descended" to the Amur, he stood under the command of Stepanov, although his rank was much higher than his new commander. The united detachment (no more than 500 people) spent the winter in the Kumar prison, set up by Khabarov about 250 km above the mouth of the Zeya, at the mouth of the rights. tributary of the Amur River. Kumara (Khumarhe). In Mar.-Apr. 1655 A detachment of 10,000 Manchus surrounded the prison. The siege lasted until April 15: after a bold sortie by the Russians, the enemy left. In June, the combined forces of the Russians descended to the mouth of the Amur, to the land of the Gilyaks, and cut down another prison here, where they stayed for the 2nd winter. B., with his Cossacks and collected yasak, moved up the Amur in August and arrived in Yeniseisk through Nerchinsk. He was the first to trace the entire Amur, from the confluence of the Shilka and Argun to the mouth (2824 km) and back. Upon his return to Tobolsk (early 1656) he was appointed to the "bailiff" to the deacon of the St. Sophia Cathedral I. Struna. “Beketov's life was cut short quite tragically.

In the winter of 1656, having caught a cold on the way, he was sick and returned from Yeniseisk to Tobolsk. Trouble awaited here. His friend, former comrade on campaigns, and now clerk of the Judgment Order of the Sofia House of the Siberian Archbishop Simeon, Ivan Struna, on the denunciation of the notorious archpriest who was then exiled in Tobolsk Habakkuk was arrested. Of course, neither the archpriest nor Struna were holy people. For a long time they lived in harmony, not without benefit to each other. But a month before the arrival of Archbishop Simeon from Moscow, a feud broke out between them because of hidden unshared money. The archpriest managed to gain confidence in Simeon and accused the far from disinterested, but rustic Ivan Struna of various “violent” sins. The string was arrested and handed over “for bailiffs” to Beketov, who was supposed to guard him. March 4, 1656 in the main cathedral of Tobolsk, Ivan Struna was anathematized - a terrible punishment for those times. Pyotr Beketov, who was present right there in the cathedral, could not stand it and began to openly scold the archpriest and the archbishop himself, "barking obscenely like a dog." A man who was not afraid of either bullets, or arrows of "foreigners", or the wrath of the governor ... could afford this. There was a noise. The frightened archpriest hid, and the enraged Beketov left the cathedral. And, as the same Habakkuk writes, on the way Peter “... went mad, going to his court, and died a bitter evil death.” Apparently, from a strong shock (and besides, he was already sick), he had a heart failure. The overjoyed archpriest hurried to the scene. Simeon ordered the corpse of Beketov, as a "great sinner", to give to the dogs on the street, and forbade all Tobolsk residents to mourn Peter. For three days the dogs gnawed at the corpse, while Simeon and Avvakum “prayed diligently” and then “honestly” buried his remains.” According to F. Pavlenkov, Beketov is the maternal ancestor of the poet A. A. Blok.

Vladimir Boguslavsky

Material from the book: "Slavic Encyclopedia. XVII century". M., OLMA-PRESS. 2004.

Founder of Siberian cities

Beketov Pyotr Ivanovich (born c. 1600–1610, died c. 1656-1661) explorer, from service people. The exact date of birth has not been established. The closest ancestors of P.I. Beketov belonged to the layer of provincial boyar children. In 1641, Pyotr Beketov himself indicated in a petition: “And my parents, sir, serve you ... in Tver and in Arzamas according to the yard and by choice”

Pyotr Beketov entered the service of the Sovereign in 1624 in the archery regiment. In January 1627, Beketov personally submitted a petition to the order of the Kazan Palace with a request to appoint him as a shooter centurion in the Yenisei jail. In the same year, he was promoted to archery centurion with a monetary and grain salary and sent to Yeniseisk.

In 1628-1629 he participated in the campaigns of the Yenisei service people up the Angara. Beketov coped with the task more successfully than his predecessor Maxim Perfilyev, became the first person to overcome the Angara rapids. Here, on the Buryat land, Beketov built the Rybinsk prison (1628). Here, for the first time, yasak was collected from several "fraternal" princes. Later, Pyotr Ivanovich recalled that he “walked from the Bratsk threshold along the Tunguska up and along the Oka River and along the Angara River and to the mouth of the Uda River ... and brought brotherly people under your sovereign’s high hand.”

On May 30, 1631, Beketov, at the head of thirty Cossacks, went to the great Lena River with the task of gaining a foothold on its banks. The well-known historian of Siberia of the eighteenth century, I. Fisher, regarded this “business trip” as recognition of the merits and abilities of a person who had done quite a lot for the state. The Lena campaign lasted 2 years and 3 months. It was not immediately possible to bring the local Buryats "under the sovereign's hand". In September 1631, Beketov, with a detachment of 20 Cossacks, moved from the Ilim portage up the Lena. The detachment went to the uluses of the Buryats-Ekhirites. However, the Buryat princes refused to pay tribute to the king. Having met resistance, the detachment managed to build a "string" and for 3 days sat under siege. A detachment of Buryats led by princes Bokoy and Borochey, using military cunning, penetrated the fortress. The fight continued with hand-to-hand combat. The onslaught of the Cossacks was swift. In the battle, 2 Tungus were killed and one Cossack was wounded. Taking advantage of the confusion of the enemy, servicemen, having captured Buryat horses, reached the mouth of the Tutura River. Here Beketov set up a Tutur prison. The natives, having heard about the prison, preferred to migrate to Baikal, but the Tungus-Nalagirs, who had previously paid tribute to them, "the sovereign's high hands were frightened" and brought Beketov yasak. From this area, the Cossacks returned to the mouth of the Kuta, where they spent the winter.

In April 1632, Beketov received reinforcements from 14 Cossacks from the new Yenisei governor Zh. V. Kondyrev and an order to go down the Lena. In September 1632, Beketov built the first sovereign prison in Yakutia near the confluence of the Aldan River with the Lena. This fortress played an enduring role in all further discoveries, became for Russia a window to the Far East and Alaska, Japan and China (it is located on the right bank of the Lena, 70 km below modern Yakutsk). The activity of Pyotr Beketov in Yakutia does not end there. Being a "prikaschik" in the Yakut prison, he sent expeditions to Vilyui and Aldan, founded Zhigansk in 1632. In total, as a result of the actions of the Beketov detachment, 31 toyon-princes recognized Russian power. In June 1633, Beketov handed over the Lensky Ostrozhek to his son P. Khodyrev, who arrived to replace him, and on September 6 he was already in Yeniseisk.

By 1635-1636. Beketov's new service applies. During these years, he sets up the Olekminsky prison, makes trips along the Vitim, Bolshoi Patom and "other side rivers"

In the spring of 1638 he went to the annual service in the Lena prison to replace I. Galkin. Beketov spent a year as a clerk in the Lensky prison.

In 1640, Beketov was sent with the Yenisei sable treasury for 11 thousand rubles to Moscow. Beketov enjoyed great prestige not only in his service environment, but also with the government. On February 13, 1641, taking into account all his previous merits, the Siberian order “granted headship” - appointed him the head of the Yenisei foot Cossacks.

In July 1647, Beketov received a letter sent to him from Moscow with an unusual order. He was instructed to imprison governor Fyodor Uvarov for 3 days, who was guilty of writing his replies to the discharge governors of Tomsk with “obscene speech”. If you believe Beketov's report, he faithfully complied with this decree.

In 1649-1650. Beketov was in the annual service in the Bratsk prison.

In 1650 Pyotr Beketov again traveled to Moscow with yasak.

In 1652, again from Yeniseisk, P. I. Beketov, “whose skill and diligence were already known,” again set out on a campaign against the Trans-Baikal Buryats. To establish the power of the Russian tsar in Transbaikalia, in June, on the orders of the Yenisei governor A.F. Pashkov, Beketov went with a detachment to the “Irgen Lake and the great Shilka River”. Beketov's detachment consisted of about 130-140 people. Despite the fact that the Cossacks were "hurriedly kind", they reached the Bratsk prison only after 2 months. It became clear to Beketov that during the summer the detachment would not be able to reach its final goal, and he decided to spend the winter on the southern coast of Lake Baikal at the mouth of the Selenga, where he laid the Ust-Prorvinsky prison. However, even from the Bratsk prison, he sent 12 Cossacks, led by I. Maksimov, lightly through the Barguzinsky prison to Irgen Lake and Shilka. Maximov was supposed to go through the Trans-Baikal steppes to Lake Irgen, where the upper reaches of the Khilok were located, and go down this river towards Beketov.

On June 11, 1653, Beketov set out from his winter hut on Prorva. The expedition reached its destination only at the end of September 1653. The detachment founded the Irgen prison near the lake. In late autumn, having crossed the Yablonovy Ridge, his detachment of 53 people descended into the valley of the river. Ingoda. The path from Irgen to Ingoda, traversed by Beketov, later became part of the Siberian Highway. By mid-October, the Irgen prison was set up, and on October 19, the Cossacks began to descend the Ingoda on rafts. Beketov, obviously, expected to reach the mouth of the Nercha before winter. However, having sailed along the Ingoda for about 10 versts, the detachment was met by an early freeze-up of the river. Here, at the mouth of the Rushmaleya, the Ingodinsky winter hut with fortifications was hastily erected, where part of the reserves were laid down. 20 people remained in the winter hut, 10 more Cossacks in November 1654, led by Makim Urazov, reached the mouth of the Nerchi River, where they laid Nelyudsky prison on the right bank of the Shilka. With the rest of the Cossacks, Beketov returned to the Irgen prison. Urazov reported to Beketov about the construction of the "small prison". The latter stated this in a reply to Pashkov, assuring the voivode that in the spring of 1654 he would set up a large prison in the place chosen by Urazov.

This winter, a “painting” and “drawing were drawn up for the Irgen Lake and other lakes on the Kilka River (R. Khilok), which fell from Lake Irgen, and the Selenga River, and other rivers that fell into the Vitim River from Irgen lakes and from other lakes. In May, Beketov was already on Shilka, where he was going to build, in accordance with Pashkov's order, a large prison. The Cossacks even sowed spring bread in the chosen place. However, the construction of Russian fortifications and the winter collection of yasak forced the Tungus tribes to take up arms. The Cossacks did not have time to build a prison, when "many Tungus people arrived exiled from the war." The Russian detachment was under siege (probably in the prison built by Urazov). The Tungus drove the horses away and trampled on the bread. Famine began among the Cossacks, since the Tungus did not allow fishing. The Yenisei had neither riverboats nor horses. They had the only way to retreat - on rafts, down the Shilka to the Amur.

On the Amur at that time, the most serious Russian force was the “army” of the clerk Onufry Stepanov, the official successor to E.P. Khabarova

At the end of June 1654, 34 Yenisei joined Stepanov, and a few days later Pyotr Beketov himself appeared, who “beat the entire Cossack army with his forehead so that he could live on the great Amur River until the sovereign’s decree.” All "Beketovites" (63 people) were accepted into the combined Amur army.

A man of independent character, Beketov knew how to appease his pride for the sake of business. When he, with the remnants of his detachment in the summer of 1654, from "grain scarcity and need ... descended" to the Amur, he stood under the command of Stepanov, although his rank was much higher than his new commander. In the autumn of 1654, Stepanov's army, which numbered just over 500 people, built the Kumar prison (at the confluence of the Khumarkhe River with the Amur). On March 13, 1655, the fortress was besieged by a 10,000-strong Manchu army. The Cossacks withstood many days of bombardment of the prison, fought off all the attacks and themselves made a sortie. Having failed, the Manchurian army on April 3 left the prison. Immediately after that, Stepanov compiled a personalized list of Cossacks who "fought clearly." Beketov, on behalf of the Yenisei service people, compiled a petition and added Stepanov to the replies. In this document, Beketov briefly outlined the reasons for leaving Shilka and asked for gratitude for the service shown in the defense of the Kumar prison. The meaning of the petition is clear - to bring to the attention of the official authorities the fact that he and his people continue to be in the sovereign's service. This document, dated April 1655, is so far the last reliable news about Beketov.

From this moment on, the data of different authors about the life of the ataman diverge. In the capital of Siberia - the city of Tobolsk, the exiled archpriest Avvakum, who was sent there in 1656, met with Beketov. In his book “The Life of Archpriest Avvakum...” he writes that, while in Yeniseisk, P. Beketov came into conflict with the “fiery” archpriest in order to protect his ward from the anathema, after which “... he went out of the church and died bitter evil death ... ".

I.E. Fisher names a much later date, when P.I. Beketov was still alive. According to him, after wandering along the Amur, in 1660 Beketov returned to Yeniseisk through Yakutsk and "brought with him a lot of sables, which served as protection for him to avert punishment, which he feared for leaving the prison."

In the same place, in Tobolsk, Yuri Kryzhanich, a Serb, a Catholic priest who was exiled to Siberia in 1661, met with Beketov. “I personally saw the one who first erected a fortress on the banks of the Lena,” he wrote. 1661 is the latest mention of Beketov's name in historical literature.

If we allow ourselves to assume that none of our “informants” is mistaken and does not lie, then it turns out that the conflict between Beketov and Avvakum, who was returned from exile to Moscow in 1661, occurred at the very end of the latter’s “Siberian epic”, and Yuri Kryzhanich saw Beketov shortly before his death. All data converge, and it turns out that in 1660 Beketov from Yeniseisk left for service in Tobolsk, where in 1661 he met both Avvakum and Kryzhanich. Thus, we can consider at least approximately the date of death of a person who did so much to consolidate the Russian state on its eastern borders.

Unfortunately, the date of birth of the founder of many Siberian cities is unknown. But if we assume that in 1628 he was at least thirty years old (no one would put an inexperienced youth at the head of a serious expedition), then in 1661 he was already an old man, so death from the shock caused by a serious conflict does not seem surprising.

However, it is possible that Beketov never returned from Amur. The story of Avvakum about the death in Tobolsk of the explorer Beketov can be recognized as unreliable.

In the census book of the Yenisei district of 1669, the widow of the son of the boyar Peter Beketov was named among the land sellers. Perhaps, after the death of her husband, she went back beyond the Urals, which is why we do not find the descendants of Pyotr Ivanovich in the service environment of Yeniseisk.