The Godunov map was an ethnographic map of Siberia commissioned by Alexis of Russia on 15 November 1667.[1] The original is no longer extant, but two copies were made: one by Claes Johansson Prytz and the other by Fritz Cronman.[2][3] It is named after Petr Ivanovich Godunov the governor (voivode) of Tobolsk.[1][4][5]
On the 15th of November 1667 the Tsar Alexey Mikhailovitch gave order to the Governor of Tobolsk, Petr Godunov, and his comrades to make a map with the ...
A copy made by the Swedish envoy to Russia, Fritz Cronman (or Kroneman) in 1669, is reproduced. ...
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... The other was made by Fritz Cronman.
The first surviving map of all of Siberia, the so-called Godunov map of 1667 (named after a Siberian governor, not the tsar), divides the territory with ...
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