Matvey Muravyev
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Matvey Ivanovich Muravyev (russian: Матвей Иванович Муравьёв; March 24, 1784 – September 27, 1836) was a Russian explorer and officer of the Russian Imperial Navy. In 1820 he was appointed by the Russian-American Company as Chief Manager, based in present-day Alaska and responsible for the company's colonization and trading efforts.


Career

Muravyev was a graduate of the
Sea Cadet Corps Sea cadets are members of a sea cadet corps, a formal uniformed youth organisation for young people with an interest in waterborne activities and or the national navy. The organisation may be sponsored in whole or in part by the navy or a naval s ...
.Pierce, Richard A. ''Russian America: A Biographical Dictionary.'' Kingston, Canada: The Limestone Press. 1990, pp. 368-371. Eventually he gained a commission as Lt. Commander on 12 October 1820 in the Imperial Russian Navy. In the same year he was appointed to direct the Russian-American Company, based in present-day Alaska, as Chief Manager, effectively governor of the Russian colonies there. Judged to be "an able administrator in a difficult time", Muravyev oversaw a growth of company operations. The Sitka Tlingit were allowed to return to their traditional residential areas, after previously been forced out under previous Chief Manager Aleksandr Baranov, after warfare over the location of the Russian fort at New Archangel (Sitka). The Tlingit built their dwellings directly outside the New Archangel palisade and under "strict rules" established by Muravyev. The renewed trade with the Tlingit gave New Archangel "a better standard of living."Black, Lydia T. ''Russians in Alaska, 1732-1867.'' Fairbanks, AK: University of Alaska Press. 2004, pp. 196-198. Construction of the first hospital founded by Russians in
North America North America is a continent in the Northern Hemisphere and almost entirely within the Western Hemisphere. It is bordered to the north by the Arctic Ocean, to the east by the Atlantic Ocean, to the southeast by South America and the Car ...
began during Murayeve's tenure. Muravyev began a practice adopted as RAC procedure, for the Chief Manager to tour the scattered company stations, including those located in the Andreanof Islands. During Muravyev's tenure, the RAC stations faced difficulty in securing provisions. In 1821, several company ships either sank or became unseaworthy while sailing from Kronstadt with supplies. Only the small ''Riurik'' reached the RAC base, carrying a minor amount of supplies compared to what was needed. News soon reached Muravyev that the company officers, based in St. Petersburg - a year's travel time away, incorrectly believed that New Archangel was well provisioned and would send no further supply ships for two years. Muravyev dispatched two ships for supplies to prevent starvation. Lt. Arvid Etholén, a future Governor of Russian America, commanded a ship that sailed to the
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. Another sailed to the markets of Yerba Buena, California to buy supplies. While the Russians gathered enough flour and other needed supplies to survive until more products could be purchased from visiting British and American ships, Russian America remained dependent on outside sources of foodstuffs. Muravyev completed his five-year term in 1825, when he was replaced by Pyotr Chistyakov.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Muravyev, Matvey Ivanovich 1784 births 1836 deaths Governors of the Russian-American Company 19th-century people from the Russian Empire Explorers from the Russian Empire People from Luga, Leningrad Oblast Naval Cadet Corps alumni