Vasilii Fedorovich Lovtsov (Russian: Василий Фёдорович Ловцов), sometimes Grigorii Lovtsov, was a late-eighteenth century Russian navigator and cartographer.
Biography
editStill a junior navigator at the time of the expedition of Pyotr Krenitsyn and Mikhail Levashov, in 1767 he was sent from Bolsheretsk on the Kamchatka Peninsula to Tobolsk with papers from Krenitsyn to the governor; detained en route at Okhotsk, the documents he was carrying were opened.[1] In 1782, back at Bolsheretsk, he compiled an atlas of the north Pacific "from Discoveries Made by Russian Mariners and Captain James Cook and His Officers".[1] Later, during Adam Laksman's voyage to Japan in 1792–3, Lovtsov captained the Ekaterina on which they sailed.[2]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Black, Lydia T., ed. (1991). The Lovtsov Atlas of the North Pacific Ocean. The Limestone Press. ISBN 978-0919642386.
- ^ Postnikov, Alexei V. (1998). "General Trends in the History of the Russian Cartography: The 17-19 Centuries" (PDF). Hokkaido University Slavic Research Center: 42.
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