The True History of the Conquest of Vinalia
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Author | Captain Bohdan Okhremovich |
---|---|
Original title | Правдива історія завоювання Віналія Spravzhnya istoriya zavoyuvannya Vinaliya |
Country | Soravia |
Language | Soravian |
Subject | Kosh, Grigori, -- 1519-1588. Orlev, Afanasij, -- 1528-1596. Vinalia -- History -- Conquest, 1568-1573. |
Published | 1595 1908 1963 |
Media type | |
Pages | 1760 |
ISBN | 0-14-044123-9 (1963) |
OCLC | 723180350 |
Spravzhnya istoriya zavoyuvannya Vinaliya (The True History of the Conquest of Vinalia) is a first-person narrative written in 1598 by military adventurer, Konkistador, and colonist settler Bohdan Okhremovich (1538–1610), who served in three Asterian expeditions; those of the expedition of Grigori Kosh to Chistovodia (1565), Afanasij Orlev (1568) to the eastern coast of Chistovodia and latter Vinalia, and the expedition of Josep Mykola (1573); the history relates his travels and life in the Asterias but particular interest is in his participation in the fall of Itzel, and the Calkhun Empire.
Late in life, when Okhremovich was in his 60s, he finished his first-person account of the Soravian conquest of Chistovodia and Vinalia. He wrote The True History of the Conquest of Vinalia to defend the story of the common-soldier Konkistador within the histories about the Soravian conquest of the Asterias. He criticized the histories of the hagiographic biographers of Afanasij Orlev, specifically that of Yevhenii Sibelius who Okhremovich believed minimized the role of the enlisted soldiers instrumental to conquering Vinalia, additionally he criticized the portrayal of Orlev, which Okhremovich believed had committed serious crimes against the Soravian crown and Grigori Kosh. In his eyewitness account, narrated in the first-person plural "we," Okhremovich strongly defends the actions of the Konkistadors.
Background
Following the discovery of Asteria Superior in 1488 by Assim Asteris, Euclean interest in the new continent quickly grew. Soravia at the time an important power in west Euclea, had desired to launch expeditions into the new continent, to establish colonies. The first such expedition was conducted in 1565, as a Soravian fleet under Grigori Kosh set sail for the Asterias. At the time Bohdan Okhremovich was a young officer in the Soravian military, and had agreed to the expedition following the death of his first wife and son a few months prior.
At the time, modern-day Chistovodia was a collection of nomadic tribes, who maintained trade links with the Úuchmáan kingdom of Itzel in modern day Zamara, Vinalia. At the time Itzel was involved in a major conflict with the Mazanan Empire which was a rump established following the decline and collapse of the Tzapotlan Empire in 1523 following its conquest by Povejan conquistadors. Novo Poveja held limited suzerainty over the rump states created following the collapse of the Tzapotlans but in most cases their control existed only on paper. Such suzerainty would serve as the basis of Povejan-Soravian and latter Ardesian-Vinalian disputes over the Chyhyryn/Granoso region.
Plot
The book gives a brief overview on the life of Okhremovich, who had been born in a rural village close to Samistopol to peasant parents in 1538. After joining the army as a volunteer at a young age, and quickly climbing over the ranks until becoming an officer. He details his first wife, Anna, noting her beauty and their first son, Ivan born in 1558. His son would die in January 1565 following a riding accident, with Anna dying on February during the birth of their second son, Sergei. With the backdrop of such tragedy, Okhremovich agreed to join the expedition of Grigori Kosh, looking to reach the Asterias.
The book notes the terrible distance, and at times hopelessness of the sailors at the never ending sea. Their arrival at the Îles des Saints under Gaullican control provided much needed rest and respite to the sailors. Many members in Kosh's expedition demanded to return home or remain in Îles des Saints, the mutiny delayed Kosh for 10 days, but Okhremovich dedicates limited oversight to such event. Okhremovich would accompany the expedition until it saw the coast of Chistovodia, and the establishment of Fort Ruda in 1566. Okhremovich was one of the men who remained in the settlement as Kosh returned to Soravia. Okhremovich notes the struggles the few conquistadores had in the region due to the climate, noting the near collapse of the colony into famine during that winter. Okhremovich states that the Fort suffered no further complications following the arrival of a great fleet under the command of Kosh, which brought 3,000 soldiers and settlers into Chistovodia.
Okhremovich skips until early 1568 when Afanasij Orlev then a captain brought in the 1567 Kosh fleet, with directions to map out the coast of Chistovodia to the south of Fort Ruda, recruits Okhremovich to aid him in the expedition. Orlev who was a nobleman of limited importance, was noted for his ruthlessness and efficiency, having served as the captain of the Soravian Colonial guard which acted as a police force in the limited Soravian presence in Chistovodia. Orlev set sail with 3 ships, and some 300 men on June 3rd, with specific instructions to map out the coast of Chistovodia, and if possible land and claim it in the name of Emperor Ivan VI, it was understand that such claims would be under the jurisdiction of Kosh as he served as governor in Chistovodia. Although Okhremovich speaks that he was not aware that Orlev had been relieved of his duty to lead such a mission on June 1st, following Orlev's refusal to step down as captain of the colonial guard, which granted him legal immunity. Orlev was believed to have committed theft, although historians refute this relatively unimportant occurence to cause such a problem for both Kosh and Orlev.
Orlev set sail on what was an illegal mission, and began mapping out the coast of Chistovodia.
Analysis
The book has been noted for its simple style, and vast attention to detail. With vivid images painted for the reader, which gave the reader an image of an idyllic country. His accounts although necessitating critical overview, are considered mostly correct, with historians preferring Okhremovich's first hand accounts over other.
Bohdan Okhremovich, pg 414
The book sparked controversy during its publishing, as the title "The true history", is a direct criticism of Yevhenii Sibelius book "The Conquest of the Asterias", published in 1593. Sibelius was the personal secretary and biographer of Afanasij Orlev, and utilized his patron along with selected sources in creating his narrative. The book was noted by contemporaries as defending Orlev, and many noted that the book had been published only after Grigori Kosh was dead, to prevent criticism or accusations of defamation from such a famous individual. Okhremovich is noted to have only published his book after the death of Orlev, although this might not have been intentional.[1]
Okhremovich wrote about both Kosh and Orlev noting their contributions to the Soravian empire, and the mission of the Episemialist Church. However he proceeds to not defend Orlev, and notes the lack of information the general, provided to his men. Stating that they were not aware of any illegal acts being done in their time in Vinalia. Many historians have disputed this view, stating that the letter indicating the removal of command from Orlev would have been read by multiple officers and men. Making it unlikely that all men who read it, did not feel the need to communicate words from an imperial governor to their fellow soldiers. Additionally most men had served under Kosh in the first expedition, and owed wealth, and rank to the man, making their blind loyalty to Orlev incredibly unlikely.
References
- ↑ Chiuchia, Denys. "A new look at The True History of the Conquest of Vinalia".