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Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen
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Fabian Gottlieb Thaddeus von Bellingshausen (also known as Russian: Фаддей Фаддеевич Беллинсгаузен; Faddey Faddeyevich Bellinsgauzen) (September 20, 1778–January 13, 1852) served as a naval officer of the Russian Empire and commanded the second Russian expedition to circumnavigate the globe. During this expedition Bellingshausen became one of three people to first see the continent of Antarctica.
Born to a Baltic German family in Lahetaguse manor (in German: Lahhetagge) in Saaremaa (Ösel) in Estonia - then part of the Russian Empire - von Bellingshausen enlisted as a cadet in the Imperial Russian Navy at the age of ten. After graduating from the Kronstadt naval academy at age eighteen, he rapidly rose to the rank of captain. A great admirer of Cook's voyages, he served from 1803 in the first Russian circumnavigation of the Earth. The vessel Nadezhda ("Hope") was commanded by Krusenstern, completing the mission in 1806. Von Bellingshausen's career continued with the command of various ships in the Baltic and Black Seas.
When
Czar Alexander I authorised an expedition to the south polar region in 1819, the authorities selected Bellingshausen to lead it. Leaving
Portsmouth on
September 5,
1819 with two ships, the 600-ton
corvette Vostok and the 530-ton support vessel
Mirnyi (captained by
Mikhail Petrovich Lazarev), the expedition crossed the
Antarctic Circle (the first to do so since Cook) on
January 26,
1820. On
January 28 1820 (
New Style) the expedition discovered the
Antarctic mainland approaching the Antarctic coast at a point with coordinates
69°21′28″S, 2°14′50″W and seeing ice-fields there. The point in question lies within twenty miles of the Antarctic mainland. Bellingshausen's diary, his report to the
Russian Naval Minister on
21 July 1821 and other documents, available in the
Russian State Museum of the Arctic and Antarctic in
Saint Petersburg,
Russia, were carefully compared with the log-books of other claimants by the British polar historian A. G. E. Jones in his 1982 study 'Antarctica Observed'. Jones concluded that Bellingshausen, rather than the Royal Navy's
Edward Bransfield on
30 January 1820 or the American
Nathaniel Palmer on
17 November 1820, was indeed the discoverer of the sought-after
Terra Australis. During the voyage Bellingshausen also visited the
South Shetland Islands, and discovered and named
Peter I,
Zavodovski,
Leskov and
Visokoi Islands, and a peninsula of the Antarctic mainland which he named the Alexander Coast but which has more recently borne the designation of
Alexander Island.
Bellingshausen Island in the
South Sandwich Islands is named after him.
The expedition continued to make discoveries in the tropical waters of the Pacific Ocean.
Returning to
Kronstadt on
4 August 1821 to no great acclaim, Bellingshausen continued to serve his
tsar. He fought in the
Russo-Turkish War of 1828–1829 and attained the rank of
admiral. He became the military governor of
Kronstadt (from 1839) and died there in 1852.
Namings
See also