Search Criteria

 






Key Word Search by:









Organization Type


State or Jurisdiction


Congressional District





help

Division or Office
help

Grants to:


Date Range Start


Date Range End


  • Special Searches




    Product Type


    Media Coverage Type








 


Search Results

Grant number like: FT-54419-06

Permalink for this Search

1
Page size:
 1 items in 1 pages
Award Number Grant ProgramAward RecipientProject TitleAward PeriodApproved Award Total
1
Page size:
 1 items in 1 pages
FT-54419-06Research Programs: Summer StipendsGwenn A. MillerCommunities of Empire in Early Russian America: 1720-1820.7/1/2006 - 9/30/2006$5,000.00GwennA.Miller   College of the Holy CrossWorcesterMA01610-2395USA2006U.S. HistorySummer StipendsResearch Programs5000050000

For a brief time in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, Kodiak Island, Alaska, was the nucleus of a bustling Russian colonial fur trade in North America. Using a range of Russian sources, from imperial decrees to Orthodox Church records, this project explores the connections between Russians and Alutiiq people during the first phases of colonial contact in Alaska. Attention to the intimacy of those connections offers a means to understand the nature of colonial enterprise and imperial power more broadly; people’s lives on colonial Kodiak intersected not at the crossroads of two homogeneous cultures, but rather composed a rich fabric of overlapping communities beyond the mere categories of “European” and “Native.”