Saint Foka
search for
and sightings of land
Smith, Leigh
Smoking
Snow blindness
of Albanov
on Alexandra Land
and early days of Albanov expedition
onset of
and sightings of land
and southward drift of Albanov
expedition
Stella Polare
Svalbard
Sverdrup, Otto
Telegrams, sending of
Thieves
Tin box, discovery of
Tobacco
Tropical fruit hallucination
Vardo, Norway
Vitamin A overdose
Vitamin B
Vize, V.
Vladivostok
“Waiting camp”
Walrus
on Alexandra Land
attacks by
on Cape Flora
and Cape Flora journey
as dangerous
description of.
as fuel for
Saint Foka
as hazard of Albanov expedition
hunting of
and Nansen’s expedition
on Northbrook Island
and original plans for
Saint Anna
polar bears compared to
and rationale for
Saint Anna
voyage
and rescue of Albanov and Konrad
and sightings of land
as tame and lazy
Weyprecht Bay
Whales
“White death”
White Island
White Sea
Whitsunday
Windward,
Jackson expedition on
Women, on Arctic expeditions
Worcester Glacier
World War I
Yamal Peninsula
Yenisei River
Zhdanko, Yerminiya
Ziegler (William) Expedition
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
V
ALERIAN
I
VANOVICH
A
LBANOV
was born in 1881 in the city of Voronezh, near the Don River in central Russia, some three hundred miles south of Moscow. His father, a veterinarian, died when Albanov was a young child, so he was raised by an uncle who lived in Ufa, a port on the Belaya River in the southwestern Urals. Mesmerized by seafaring tales from an early age, Albanov embarked on his first maritime adventure while still a schoolboy, but was forced to return home when his small craft sank. Though his uncle wanted him to become an engineer, Albanov was determined to study navigation, and at the age of seventeen he entered the Naval College at St. Petersburg. During the four years he spent as a student there, he supported himself by building scale models of ships. Upon graduation in 1904, Albanov trained on various vessels in the Baltic Sea before traveling to Krasnoyarsk in central Siberia, where he sailed down the Yenisei River to the Kara Sea as a first officer on the steamer
Ob.
From 1909 through 1911 he made numerous voyages between Arkhangel’sk and British ports aboard the steamship
Kildin.
Then, in 1912, Albanov signed on as navigator of the schooner
Saint Anna,
under the command of Captain Georgiy Brusilov, bound for Vladivostok across the Northeast Passage—the ill-starred voyage that is recounted so vividly in these pages. Even before Albanov and Alexander Konrad fought their way back to civilization and told of the plight of their icebound shipmates, a number of search parties (including one headed by the seasoned Arctic explorer Otto Sverdrup) set out to find the
Saint Anna
but failed to turn up any trace of the ship. In October 1914 Albanov met the hydrographer Leonid Breitfuss, who persuaded him to write an account of the astounding ordeal he had just endured. Albanov’s memoir, originally titled
Na
iug, k Zemle Frantsa Iosifa
(
Southbound to Franz Josef Land
), was published in St. Petersburg in 1917, on the eve of the October Revolution, as an appendix to the journal
Zapisok po
gidrografii
(
Notes on Hydrography
). Various editions of the work subsequently appeared in Russian as
Mezhdu zhizniu i
smertiu
(
Between Life and Death,
1925),
Zateriannye vo ldakh
(
Lost in the Ice,
1934 and 1978), and
Podvigi shturmana V. I.
Albanova
(
The Exploits of the Navigator V. I. Albanov,
1953). It was also translated into German as
Irrfahrten im Lande des
weissen Todes
(
Travels in the Land of White Death,
1925) and later into French as
Au pays de la mort blanche
(
In the Land of
White Death,
1928 and 1998). More recently, Albanov’s post-expedition letters were published in the journal
Letopis
severa
(
Northern Memoirs;
Moscow, 1985, 11:174–81).
Despite his harrowing escape from the
Saint Anna,
Albanov continued going to sea. For a time he served with his fellow survivor Konrad aboard the
Canada,
an ice-breaker that serviced the port of Arkhangel’sk. Following a brief stay in a military hospital in St. Petersburg, he also sailed on ships from the Baltic ports of Tallinn and Haapsalu, and from Krasnoyarsk on the Yenisei River. Valerian Albanov died in the fall of 1919. By some accounts he succumbed to typhoid; other sources report that he was killed when a munitions wagon exploded as he was passing through a railway station in the Siberian town of Achinsk.
On the thirtieth anniversary of Albanov’s death, the noted Russian geographer and Arctic explorer Vladimir Vize (who was aboard the
Saint Foka
when that ship rescued Albanov) paid him this tribute in the journal
Letopis
severa
(
Northern Memoirs;
Moscow, 1949, 1:279–81): “Albanov owed his survival to his personal qualities: bravery, energy, and strong will. . . . His book, with its intriguing drama and fascinating simplicity and sincerity, is among the most prominent writings about the Arctic in Russian literature.”
In 1975, Arctic expert William Barr wrote, “The name of Valerian Ivanovich Albanov must be ranked among those of the immortals of polar exploration.”
T
HE
M
ODERN
L
IBRARY
E
DITORIAL
B
OARD
Maya Angelou
•
Daniel J. Boorstin
•
A. S. Byatt
•
Caleb Carr
•
Christopher Cerf
•
Ron Chernow
•
Shelby Foote
•
Stephen Jay Gould
•
Vartan Gregorian
•
Charles Johnson
•
Jon Krakauer
•
Edmund Morris
•
Joyce Carol Oates
•
Elaine Pagels
•
John Richardson
•
Salman Rushdie
•
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.
•
Carolyn See
•
William Styron
•
Gore Vidal