Russian Diplomat in the Vilayet of Islamic Holy Sites in the Beginning of the Twentieth Century
https://doi.org/10.22394/2073-7203-2020-38-1-229-260
EDN: XVQAIL
Abstract
This article endeavors to detect the goals, main tracks and priorities of the Russian diplomacy in a vilayet of the Ottoman Empire - Hejaz, which hosted major Islamic sanctuaries. Religion and politics were tightly interwoven in Russia's diplomatic activities there. Our analysis is made at the micro level, through the official correspondence of a Russian diplomat, Michail Nikolsky, who in the early 20th century served as a secretary of the Russian Imperial Consulate in Jeddah, Hejaz. The article also seeks to examine the influence of the human factor, sometimes wrongfully ignored, but always retaining a powerful presence in real politics. The recent developments indicate that even in the hyper-globalization era, despite the triumph of systemic institutions, the personification of policy remains a phenomenon of a planetary magnitude. The approach followed by the author in this article is akin, to a certain extent, to some anthropological models of historical research and can be also categorized as a kind of political anthropology. The tasks and goals of the Russian diplomacy are determined as a result of close scrutiny of the perused archival documents from the Foreign Policy Archive of the Russian Empire of the period of the First Russian Revolution of 1905-1907. Many of these documents are unedited. They tend to evoke the sense of deja vu reminding the Soviet/Russian foreign policy efforts undertaken in He-jaz/Saudi Arabia during the Soviet and post-Soviet time.
About the Author
Vitaly NaumkinRussian Federation
References
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Review
For citations:
Naumkin V. Russian Diplomat in the Vilayet of Islamic Holy Sites in the Beginning of the Twentieth Century. State, Religion and Church in Russia and Worldwide. 2020;38(1):229-260. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.22394/2073-7203-2020-38-1-229-260. EDN: XVQAIL