^^^^■BOiiiiuiuraH - ■ • • .•M;i''.l);M.r: ■■■'!■.'■ Offl|f){f}li|f||?jii))iiVfe,rt^Ky THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE »-®- to <^a D. W. L cyd en I-J ^ THE COSSACKS THEIR HISTORY AND COUNTRY THE COSSACKS THEIR HISTORY AND COUNTRY BY W. P. CRESSON LATE CAPTAIN A. E. P., FORMERLY SECRETARY Off THE AMERICAN EMBASSY AT PETROGRAD AUTHOR OP "Persia" NEW YORK BRENTANO'S 1919 COPYRIGHTED, IQig, BY BRENTANO'S All rights reserved THK-PLIMPTON -PRESS NORWOOD -MASS -t-S-A TO MT BROTHER EMLEN VAUX CRESSON K REMINDER OP OUR JOURNEY ALONG THE TEHERAN-BAGDAD CARAVAN TRAIL, 1900. i CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I. The Origin of the "Free People" 1 II. The Zaporogian Cossacks 21 /^III. Yermak and the Cossack Conquest of Siberia 44 zIV. Bogdan Hmelnicky: A Cossack National Hero 65 /'"V. The Struggle for the Ukraine 93 VI. Mazeppa 104 VII. The End of the Free Ukraine: Little Russia 129 viii. pougatchev 145 IX. The Hetman Platov 170 X. The Cossacks of To-day: Organization AND Government 196 XI. The Cossacks of To-day : The Don 209 XII. The Frontiers of Europe 222 ILLUSTRATIONS Zaporogian Cossacks Fro7itispiece The old defenders of the Polish and Russian fron- tiers against the Tartars writing a letter of defiance to the Sultan. FACING PACK A Zaporogian Cossack 22 Yermak's March in Siberia 44 Statue of Bogdan 66 The Hetman Platov '. 170 Sketch Map of the [principal Cossack Territories of the Present Day 196 Kouban Cossacks 220 And "Cossacks" of the "Wild Division." FOREWORD TO weave a connected narrative from the known episodes of Cossack history would be a diffi- cult and, in many ways, an impossible task. Such a work would, moreover, involve years of patient preparation and research — for authentic records concerning the subject are only to be found scat- tered as isolated chapters or paragraphs among the pages of Russian, Polish and Turkish history. Poets and native bards were, generally speaking, the chief historians of the Cossacks or "Free People." The guiding traditions of their race, like those of all pastoral peoples, are to be found in songs, ballads and f olkstories, rather than in written records. Yet the national ideals thus orally main- tained have lost nothing thereby in strength or influence. The Cossack ballads and khorovod of the present day, like those of earlier times, teach love of freedom, loyalty to comrades and hetman, and a sturdy devotion to the privileges which the courage of their forefathers obtained for them in the past. Cossack folktales differ in many respects from the heroic legends and peasant by-lines of the North. They possess, moreover, a characteristic vi FOREWORD strain — praise of joyous adventure and "glad living" — all their own. Filled with the spirit of the "Free Steppes," tliey tell of hard knocks given and taken for the sheer love of fight; of struggles desperate and bloody, followed by Gargantuan feasting and debauch. Doughty feats with the wine-cup are honoured almost equally with deeds of war. In all these romances the dominant note is the praise of personal liberty and of a freedom often degenerating into license. AVliile the Cossack did, or ballad-mongers, frankly celebrate the deeds of their heroes in a measure of exaggeration permitted by patriotism and poetic license, the more ambitious and labored "historical" works of certain Polish and Russian writers only furnish an account so manifestly par- tial and prejudiced that they have little more schol- arly authority than the Cossack folklore tales. A great historical romance has added to this con- fusion. All that is generally known abroad con- cerning the most glorious epoch of Cossack history is contained in the heroic pages of the late Henryk Sienkiewicz. In these masterpieces of fiction the part plaj^ed by the tjrrannical oppressors of the Cossack patriot Bogdan is lauded to the skies, and every act of his "base-born" followers too often treated with a fine if unconvincingly nobiliary con- tempt. To French historical authorities, Salvandy, Ram- baud and notably I^esur (to whose Ilistoire des FOREWORD vii Kosaques, published in 1814, the author acknowl- edges himself especially indebted) we owe a more objective treatment of the Cossack's story. Fol- lowing their lead the writer will attempt in his work to dispel something of the ignorance so strangely persistent outside of Russia with respect to the origin and significance of this military caste or people. The term "Cossack," while generally applied to a characteristic branch of the old Russian cavalry service — more properly designates a com- munity of warlike clans loosely bound together by the common tradition of a long and stirring history. If during the closing decades of the imperial system the Cossack "nations" became more or less identi- fied with the other peoples of the Russian empire, they were nevertheless permitted through the strength of their free traditions and the importance of their services to the state, to retain the marks of an outstanding individuality — a policy wholly in opposition to the great unifying aim of Russian imperialism. It is the proudest boast of the Cossacks of to- day — as of their forbears of the Ukraine — that they have never been classed as serfs nor for a mo- ment lost their freeman's instinct for the principles of liberty. While the peasants of North Russia were bowed in shameful submission to the Great Princes of Moscow and later to the "dark forces" of the Tsar's court and the Baltic-German official- dom of the capital on the Neva, the history of the viii FOREWORD Cossack inhabitants of the southern steppes was (as we shall later see) a long epic of heroic resistance to ^*^ the encroachments of autocracy. If their distrust of the infinite docility of the moujik class has often made them in the past the blind instruments of reaction, their loyalty to Tsardom has never im- plied any abdication of the privileges guaranteed their own caste. While the organization of the present Cossack armies is the outcome of a system which may gen- erally be termed "Democratic-Feudalism" — i. e., a popular system of land tenure in return for military service to the old regime — their basic traditions were essentially free and republican. In spite of their old-time loyalty to the Tsar, the Cossack troops of the army — and notably those about the imperial court — were among the first to raise the standard of revolt during the constructive changes of March, 1917. The return of the Cossacks to the side of popular government was but the logical out- come of the whole trend of their history. In order to understand the significance of the present Cossack movement in Southern Russia and the difference separating the former "Free People" of the Russian Empire from the moujiki or peas- antry of the north, some knowledge of their history and origin is essential. The following pages only attempt to sketch the outlines of their subject, yet so far as the author is aware no more comprehensive study of Cossack FOREWORD IX life and history has appeared in English. The chapter which traces the early history and develop- ment of the Cossack race is little more than a syn- opsis of facts forming part of a much broader subject: the history of the growth and expansion of Modem Russia. Elsewhere in this narrative, an effort has been made to follow, whenever pos- sible, the colourful style of the original Cossack legends and sources. These latter are almost always biographical and fragmentary yet they give a vivid picture of their time and subject. The story of Yermak's heroic march through the twilight of the northern forests and his discovery and conquest of Siberia ; of Bogdan's fight for the Cossack hberties against the proud nobles of Poland; of Mazeppa's almost forgotten part in the epic struggle between Charles XII of Sweden and Peter the Great for the Empire of the North; of the strange outbreak of savagery led by the "False Tsar" Pougatchev — the eighteenth century forerunner of the mob- leaders of our own day — are matters of interest to the general reader. Recent events show the importance of a better understanding of the facts of Cossack history. One qualification at least the author may claim for the task he has undertaken. Many miles of travel in Cossack country during two fateful years — just before and after the Russian Revolution — brought him into familiar and friendly contact with the Cossacks of the present day. Out of a desire to X FOREWORD acquaint himself more thoroughly with their story and the j)art they have played in Russia's develop- ment grew the notes and studies from which the present volume has been written. W. P. C. Princeton University, September, 1919. THE COSSACKS THEIR HISTORY AND COUNTRY CHAPTER I THE ORIGIN OF THE "FREE PEOPLE'' THE level plains and steppes of South Russia were known to the ancients as the broad channel followed by the ebb and flow of every fresh wave of conquest or migration passing be- tween Europe and Asia. The legions of Rome and Byzance found this territory as impossible to oc- cupy by military force as the high seas. The little known history of "Scythia" — from the earliest times until the thirteenth century of the Christian era — presents a confused picture of barbarous tribes pressing one upon another, the stronger driving the weaker before them from the more fa- voured hunting grounds. Often, voluntarily or by force, the victors included the vanquished in their own "superior" civilization. There are many reasons why it is difficult or impossible to follow with any degree of certainty the national history of these races. "Their long-forgotten quarrels, their interminglings and separations, above all the constant changes in their names and habitat make 2 THE COSSACKS the study of their history as difficult as it is un- profitable." (Lesur, Histoire des Kosaques.) This ignorance of the changes — political and economical — which are constantly taking place along the amorphous racial frontiers of Eastern Europe, has continued to our own times. But at recurrent intervals these Slav borderlands sepa- rating the Occident from the Orient become the scene of political upheavals so vast in their con- sequences that the very foundations of European civilization are shaken in their turn. The great Tartar invasion which,