
The governmental policy on forest beekeeping in the Russian Empire in the 18th—19th centuries
Author(s) -
Федотова Анастасия Алексеевна,
Лоскутова Марина Викторовна
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
izvestiâ russkogo geografičeskogo obŝestva
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0869-6071
DOI - 10.31857/s0869-6071151278-95
Subject(s) - legislation , beekeeping , empire , state (computer science) , private property , christian ministry , cadastre , political science , geography , business , economy , forestry , environmental protection , law , economics , ecology , algorithm , computer science , biology
Based on published and archival sources, the paper considers the transformations in Russian legislation and administrative policies on forest beekeeping (harvesting honey from owned or tended nests in forests) in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It demonstrates how in the course of the eighteenth century, the ownership of bee nests started violating the concept of absolute private property over forests, which was increasingly incompatible with the rights of other individuals to exploit natural resources on the same territory. From the early decades of the 19th century, borders were gradually demarcated between forested areas belonging to the state and private owners, and between the state forests and those designated for the use of state peasants. This process made possible to exercise the concept of absolute private property over forests in practice. These changes in legislation and the forest cadastre were closely linked to the making of ‘forestry science’ that developed in the late 18th century under the influence of a growing demand for timber needed for the navies and merchant fleets of all European states. The precepts of ‘forestry science’ were dictated by its objective to maximise profits by focusing on the production of commercially valuable sorts of timber. By the early 19th century, this logic prompted the forest administration of the Russian empire to start contemplating measures that would obstruct any alternative forms of forest exploitation, such as harvesting honey from tended trees. The paper considers in details the tightening of administrative regulations in this area, as imposed by the Ministry of State Domains that reached its peak in the Great Reforms era, and analyses the mechanisms that translated these general causes at work into specific policies.