Nikolay Bestuzhev

Self-portrait (1838); holding portrait of his brother, Mikhail (below)

Nikolay Alexandrovich Bestuzhev (Russian: Николай Александрович Бестужев; (13 April 1791, Saint Petersburg - 27 May 1855, Novoselenginsk) was a Russian Navy officer, writer, inventor and portrait artist; associated with the Decembrist revolt.

Biography

He was born to a noble family. His father, Alexander, was a writer and government councilor. His brothers, Alexander, Mikhail, Pyotr, and Pavel were also writers, military officers and Decembrists.

He entered the Sea Cadet Corps school in 1802 and graduated in 1809. While there, he audited classes taught by Andrey Voronikhin at the Imperial Academy of Arts.[1] In 1810, he became a Lieutenant in the Corps. In 1815, he participated in naval actions in the Netherlands. He was appointed an Assistant Superintendent for the Baltic lighthouse in Kronstadt in 1820. [2] Two years later, he reorganized the lithography department at the Admiralty, for which he was awarded the Order of Saint Vladimir, and began writing a history of the fleet.[1]

Portrait of his brother, Mikhail

In 1824, he was promoted to Lieutenant-Commander and, shortly after, was named Director of the Admiralty's museum, where he was known as "The Mummy". During this time he also contributed to the journals Polar Star (edited by his brother, Alexander) and Syn otechestva. He also served with the Bureau of Censorship and, in 1825, became a member of the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts.[1]

These achievements were short-lived, however. Since 1824, he had been a member of "North", a secret society headed by Kondraty Ryleyev, and had written a "Manifesto to the Russian People". Following the Decembrist riot on Peter's Square, during which he led a unit of rebellious guardsmen, he went into hiding but was found and arrested. He was taken to the Peter and Paul Fortress and, on July 10, 1826, was convicted of engaging in subversive activities and mutiny. He was sentenced to katorga (hard labor) for life.[2]

Life in Siberia

The following month, he and his brother Mikhail were taken to the fortress in Shlisselburg. In September 1827, they were transferred to Siberia and placed in a special prison at the confluence of the Chita and Ingoda rivers.[1] In 1830, they were moved again, into the town of Petrovsk-Zabaykalsky. In 1832, their terms were reduced to fifteen years. Shortly after, he entered into a common-law marriage and had two children; one of whom was Alexey Startsev, a major figure in the commercial trade between Russia and China. The year 1839 found him and his brother transferred to Novoselenginsk, where he chose to remain; dying there in 1855.

Monument to Bestuzhev in Novoselenginsk

Despite the harsh conditions, he painted numerous portraits of his fellow Decembrists, the family members who had followed them there and local villagers; at first in watercolor, later in oils. At the end of his term, he spent 1841 in Irkutsk, doing portraits of government officials.[1]

He was also engaged as a cobbler, lathe operator and watchmaker. In that capacity, he developed a design for a high-precision chronometer based on a "new system" which he never revealed.[2] During the Crimean War, he designed a gun lock. He also made meteorological and astronomical observations, created an irrigation system, bred sheep, found a new coal deposit and collected Buryat folk tales.[1]

In 1973, the playwright Semyon Metelitsa wrote a drama about Bestuzhev called Гражданин России (A Citizen of Russia). The 1990 feature-length film, Нет чужой земли (No Foreign Land) is based on his life in Siberia. It was directed by Baras Khalzanov and stars Pyotr Yurchenkov as Bestuzhev.[3]

Available writings

Selected portraits

References

Further reading

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