The Russian army had a long history of engagement with #leopards, and quite a bloody one. The leopard (almost extinct), tiger, and cheetah (both extinct) at the National Museum of Georgia are a vivid testimony of the environmental change that Russian imperialism brought along. 🧵
With the conquest of the Caucasus and Central Asia, the Russian Empire set foot into a natural world that differed much from that of mainland Russia. Leopards and tigers, among others, inhabited a wide area that included evergreen rainforests of Georgia and Azerbaijan. 2/
If the vision of the Caucasus as "Russia's India" haunted the minds of economists and agriculturists, naturalists were quick to trace commonalities with India with respect to its animal diversity. Exotic fauna only highlighted the region's alleged "tropicality." 3/
A lot has been written about big-game hunting in the colonial world. Tsarist Asia was no exception. Killing exotic animals for sport was a favourite, if rare, form of leisure for the Russian militaries. The very presence of leopards in the Caucasus struck imperial newcomers. 4/
In 1848, one officer stationed in Georgia described how, to avoid boredom caused by the destructive effect of the hot climate, which was turning him into a "lazy Asiatic," he went hunting leopards even though, "as a European," he did not believe they really lived there. 5/
Another officer stationed in Erivan in 1850 was so bored by the lack of civilized entertainment that the "only pleasure" for him was to hunt tigers and hyenas. In the South Caucasus and Central Asia, the local population did not normally hunt leopards and tigers. 6/
The Russian imperial administration, on the contrary, encouraged their extermination because it considered their existence incompatible with the very purpose of Russia's imperial mission there – the imposition of order and civilization. 7/
Russian sources noticed a dramatic change that happened after the arrival of the Russian militaries: exotic predators began to disappear. In the 1860s, every soldier in Turkestan who killed a tiger received 15 rubles as a reward. The amount of reward increased over time. 8/
In the first decade of the 20th century, the ideas of nature conservation gained currency among the learned societies and the authorities. The drive to safeguard endangered species before it was too late led to the establishment of nature reserves throughout the Caucasus. 9/
But even then the government deemed leopards and tigers as animals "subject to extermination." As a result of these policies and practices, leopards have almost become extinct in the Caucasus in wild. Tigers and cheetahs became extinct long ago. 10/
The task of the Caucasus Museum, established in 1867 and currently known as the National Museum of Georgia, was to showcase the diversity and exoticism of the natural world (as well as local peoples and their distinctively "Oriental" culture) of the Caucasus and Turkmenistan. 11/
Now it attests to the recklessness of empire. end/
Hilarious. Embassy of Russia in South Africa has conveniently forgotten that Russia’s Foreign Ministry hatched plans to colonize South Africa in the age of high imperialism. Documents in their ministerial archives, AVPRI, can tell us an inconvenient story.🧵
In early 1905, a certain Joubert-Pienaar, a former Boer general, contacted Aleksandr Koiander, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Minister of the Embassy of Russia in Portugal. He proposed an idea that shocked Koiander's imagination: a tsarist colony in South Africa. 2/
Joubert invited the Russian government to provoke a rebellion of the Bantu peoples against the British rule, which would significantly weaken the tsarist biggest rival. Foreign Ministry was thrilled. In his letter to Nicholas II, Minister Vladimir Lamsdorf wrote that... 3/
The newly forged myth of Ukrainians as blonde and blue-eyed betrays a profound misconception of what Ukraine is, how Ukrainians view themselves, and how they historically have been viewed in the Tsarist and Soviet Empires. A 🧵 debunking the fundamentally wrong idea. 1/
From the early 19th century, all descriptions of Ukrainians portrayed them as sharing a particular set of facial features. Romantic Ukrainian literature, travel accounts, ethnographic works, and art contributed to the image of Ukrainians as dark-haired and brown-eyed. 2/
For Ukrainian activists, this ideal of beauty was a way to carve out a specific place for the Ukrainian nationality by stressing the distinctiveness of the Ukrainian body. The famous popular song “Black eyebrows, brown eyes” gives a sense of how common this stereotype was. 3/
I wonder how the carefully cultivated image of Russia as the leader of the Global South's anti-colonial struggle against the West correlates with the fact that the popular anti-US imagery that swept over Russia in 2013-15 was profoundly racist? 1/
Unlike the Soviet visual propaganda, which featured an image of a fat man with a top hat and a sack of gold, pro-Kremlin anti-US visuals focused mostly on one feature — Barak Obama’s skin color. 2/
In 2013, Irina Rodnina, an MP from the United Russia party, tweeted a racist picture of Barak and Michelle Obama looking at a banana. Even though she deleted the twit after an international scandal, the image of Obama with a banana became widespread. 3/
At the heart of Africa's image of Russia as an anti-colonial power lies a myth about the vital help it provided to Ethiopia at the Battle of Adwa in 1896. This myth, personified by the figure of Nikolai Leont'ev, conceals a grim history of tsarist colonial pursuits in Ethiopia.🧵
Each year on the Adwa Victory Day, the Russian Embassy in Ethiopia underscores Russia's contribution to the victory by posting fake photos. Here, it claims to be showing a photo of "Russian volunteer soldiers," which in fact portrays Italian colonial forces in Eritrea in 1889. 2/
Here, a photo of actual Russian colonizers — Ashinov and his "Cossacks" — in the ill-fated Russian colony in Djibouti is used in the same way. Ironically, it was Leont'ev who nearly succeeded where Ashinov failed, having become a "ruler" of an African realm. 3/
This morning, Russian missiles hit my hometown, which is many hundreds of km from the frontline. Smoke was all over the sky. The entire city was left without electricity and water. There are some important reasons of why this is happening. 1/
Apart from Russia's effort to unleash terror all over Ukraine, destroying the livelihoods of millions of people and leaving them with no heating, water and power supply with the arrival of winter cold, and apart from genocidal considerations ("Ukrainians should not exist")... 2/
...there is also an issue, much-discussed in revanchist groups, of whether a former imperial possession that is breaking away with an empire is allowed to keep the "gifts of civilization" that the empire had given it during their time "together." According to this view... 3/
All comforting stories about how Russians did not colonize Africa stop short of telling that they actually shed their blood trying. This is a long 🧵 about how French bombs on the Red Sea coast smashed the tsarist colonial dream of Africa to pieces. 1/
In January 1889, a solemn flag-raising ceremony was held in Djibouti. A flag of three horizontal bands – red, blue, and white – was raised over the fort of Sagallo, symbolizing the African territory’s annexation “for eternity” by its new colonial overlord, the Russian Empire. 2/
How was it even possible? Russia did not negotiate any colony at the Berlin Conference of 1884–85, where European powers divided the continent. However, even before the conference closed its doors, its organizer, Bismarck, invited the Russian Empire to join in the scramble. 3/