reached Tobolsk: Rose 1837–42, vol.1, p.487.
27
‘analogies and contrasts’: AH Central Asia 1844, vol.1, p.2.
28
‘small extension’: AH to Cancrin, 23 July 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.153.
29
‘his death’: Ibid., p.154
30
Cancrin received AH’s letter: Cancrin to AH, 18 August 1829, ibid., p.175.
31
‘without any sign’: Gregor von Helmersen, September 1828, Beck 1959, p.108.
32
Siberian steppes: Rose 1837–42, vol.1, pp.494–6.
33
leather masks: AH to Cancrin, 23 July 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.154; Rose 1837–42, pp.494–8; Beck 1983, p.96ff.
34
‘sea voyage on land’ and travel speed: AH to WH, 4 August 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, pp.161, 163, and Suckow 1999, p.163.
35
anthrax epidemic: Rose 1837–42, vol.1, p.499; AH to WH, 4 August 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.161.
36
‘At my age’: AH to Cancrin, 27 August 1829, ibid., p.177.
37
‘traces of the pest’: Rose 1837–42, vol.1, p.500.
38
‘clean the air’: Ibid.
39
storm at Obi River: Ibid., p.502; AH to WH, 4 August 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.162.
40
1,000 miles in nine days: Rose 1837–42, vol.1, p.502.
41
distances to Berlin and Caracas: AH to WH, 4 August 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.162.
42
saw Altai mountains: Rose 1837–42, vol.1, p.523
43
left baggage in Ust-Kamenogorsk: Ibid., p.580.
44
AH in cave: Ibid., p.589.
45
‘covered the bottom’: Jermoloff about Ehrenberg, Beck 1983, p.122.
46
‘real joy’: AH to Cancrin, 27 August 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.178.
47
vegetation Altai: Rose 1837–42, vol.1, pp.575, 590.
48
‘mighty domes’: Ibid., p.577; for Belukha pp. 559, 595.
49
Altai and Belukha enticing: Ibid., p.594.
50
hot spring and earthquake: Ibid., p.597.
51
‘My health’: AH to WH, 10 September 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.181.
52
description of AH at Baty: Rose 1837–42, vol.1, pp.600–606; AH to Arago, 20 August 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.170.
53
dressed in ‘rags’: AH to Arago, 20 August 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.170.
54
the ‘heavenly kingdom’: AH to WH, 13 August 1829, ibid., p.172.
55
route from Altai: Beck 1983, p.120ff; AH to WH, 10 and 25 September 1829, pp.181, 188.
56
Lenin’s maternal grandfather: Ibid., p.128.
57
‘Thirty years ago’: AH to Cancrin, 15 September 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.184.
58
detour to Caspian Sea: AH to Cancrin, 26 September 1829, ibid., p.191; see also AH, Aspects, vol.2, p.300; AH Views 2014, p.283; AH Ansichten 1849, vol.2, p.363.
59
Cancrin kept AH up to date: Cancrin to AH, 31 July 1829 and 18 August 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, pp.158, 175.
60
reasons for detour: AH to WH, 25 September 1829, ibid., p.188.
61
‘peace outside the gates’: AH to Cancrin, 21 October 1829, ibid., p.200.
62
Astrakhan and Caspian Sea: Rose 1837–42, vol. 2, p.306ff.; Beck 1983, p.147ff.
63
AH to scientists in St Petersburg: AH, Speech at Imperial Academy of Science, St Petersburg, 28 November 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, pp.283–4.
64
AH and Caspian Depression: AH Fragments Asia 1832, p.50.
65
‘highlights of my life’: AH to WH, 14 October 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.196.
66
AH’s experiences in Russia: For mare’s milk, see AH to WH, 25 September 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.188; for Kalmyk choir, see Rose 1837–42, vol.2, p.344; for antelopes, snakes and fakir, see AH to WH, 10 September and 21 October 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, pp.181, 199; Rose 1837–42, vol.2, p.312; for thermometer and copy of
, see Beck 1983, pp.113, 133; for Siberian food, see AH to Friedrich von Schöler, 13 October 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.193.
67
‘lack of timber’: AH to Cancrin, 21 June 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.136.
68
considerable desiccation: AH Fragments Asia 1832, p.27.
69
‘connections which linked’: AH Central Asia 1844, vol.1, p.27.
70
destruction of forests: Ibid., p.26; see also vol.1, p.337 and vol.2, p.214; AH Fragments Asia 1832, p.27.
71
‘great masses of steam’: Ibid., vol.2, p.214.
72
‘questionable’ (footnote): AH Central Asia 1844, vol.1, p.337.
73
distances and horses used: Bruhns 1873, vol.1, p.380; Suckow 1999, p.163.
74
AH’s health: AH to Cancrin, 5 November 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.204.
75
parties in Moscow and St Petersburg: Alexander Herzen, November 1829, Bruhns 1873, vol.1, pp.384–6; AH to WH, 21 November 1829, AH Letters Russia 2009, pp.219–20.
76
‘Prometheus of our days’: Sergei Glinka, Bruhns 1873, vol.1, p.385.
77
‘Captivating speeches’: Pushkin in 1829, recounted by Georg Schmid in 1830, AH Letters Russia 2009, p.251.
78
‘I’m almost collapsing’: AH to WH, 21 November 1829, ibid., p.219.
79
AH asked tsar to pardon exiles: AH to Tsar Nicholas I, 7 December 1829, ibid., p.233.
80
‘mysterious march’: AH Cosmos 1845–52, vol.1, p.167; AH Kosmos 1845–50, vol.1, p.185.
81
‘reveal to us’: Report on letter from AH to Royal Society, 9 June 1836,
, vol.3, 1830–37, p.420 (Humboldt had written the letter in April 1836).
82
magnetic hut 1827: Biermann und Schwarz 1999a, p.187.
83