Studying the social history of a Russian microregion, based on historical maps and aerial survey
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu02.2021.317Abstract
This study focused on a Russian agrarian microregion (12.5 km2) situated in a forest steppe area (in Tambov Oblast), during the 18th–19th centuries. The research illuminates the mechanisms, patterns, and impact that the environment has on social processes, and vice versa –the human impact on the environment (and particularly on landscape). The authors created a geographic information system which they used to compare the results of aerial survey and satellite imagery, as well as other primary sources. Morphological anomalies were identified on an orthophotomap, and then interpreted. Conclusions could be drawn about the nature of interaction between the agrarian society and the environment. Settlement in the plains of the forest steppe is heavily dependent on the water regime, which directly affects the condition and dynamics of communication routes and economic infrastructure. The vanished settlement found in this study is an example of such an effect: it grew up along a road and was abandoned when the areas through which the road ran were waterlogged. Plain rivers can alter the surrounding landscape quite drastically over relatively short historical periods, and are themselves subject to anthropogenic influence. Changes in living conditions and economic management led to variability in settlement patterns and land use. This can be seen especially well in the lowland, where such schemes were predominantly temporary. The processing of Earth remote sensing data makes it possible to fill gaps in sources and discover new evidence of the past.
Keywords:
history, microregion, agrarian society, environment, historical maps, Earth remote sensing
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Articles of "Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History" are open access distributed under the terms of the License Agreement with Saint Petersburg State University, which permits to the authors unrestricted distribution and self-archiving free of charge.